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GEOREF RECORD

Metamorphic features in North American massive sulfide deposits

J. Kalliokoski
Metamorphic features in North American massive sulfide deposits
Economic Geology and the Bulletin of the Society of Economic Geologists (May 1965) 60 (3): 485-505

Abstract

Many massive sulfide deposits in North America show textures and structures that are deformational in origin. These features have been superimposed on original mineralogical ones to the extent that in many deposits the essential characteristics necessary to elucidate the conditions of primary genesis no longer exist. The massive sulfide deposits have been metamorphosed with their walls, thereby destroying much of the evidence of wall-rock alteration, if it existed at all.Thus, characteristically a metamorphosed ore shows a granoblastic texture; complex and paragenetically inconsistent grain-boundary relationships; the porphyroblastic growth of some minerals, and the re-equilibration of others under metamorphic conditions; and the migration of minerals like chalcopyrite in a stress-field.The least altered deposits studied by the writer are the Kam Kotia Mine, Ontario, and the Anacon Mine, N. B. Those showing the greatest effect of a metamorphic imprint are Heath Steele, N. B., but especially the Appalachian pyritic deposits extending from Maine to Ducktown. On the basis of a literature survey the writer proposes that the Horne Mine, Quebec, and the Thomson Lake nickel deposits in Manitoba also predate the last period of metamorphism.Concerning New Brunswick ores, the writer concludes from his work and the review of existing data that: (1) the ores were fine-grained originally; (2) one cannot deduce the sequential deposition of minerals, or introduction of metals, from a study of their textures; (3) the O (sub 16) /O (sub 18) equilibrium temperature (515 degrees C) on a quartz-magnetite pair from the country rock indicates the possibility of fairly high temperatures during the regional metamorphic episode; (4) the ores may be of Ordovician age; (5) the ores may have been deposited, or dumped, under slight lithostatic or hydrostatic load, forming replacements in consolidated or unconsolidated sediments.


ISSN: 0361-0128
EISSN: 1554-0774
Coden: ECGLAL
Serial Title: Economic Geology and the Bulletin of the Society of Economic Geologists
Serial Volume: 60
Serial Issue: 3
Title: Metamorphic features in North American massive sulfide deposits
Author(s): Kalliokoski, J.
Pages: 485-505
Published: 196505
Text Language: English
Publisher: Economic Geology Publishing Company, Lancaster, PA, United States
Accession Number: 1965-014089
Categories: Economic geology of ore deposits
Document Type: Serial
Bibliographic Level: Analytic
Illustration Description: illus.
N45°00'00" - N48°04'60", W69°00'00" - W63°45'00"
N42°00'00" - N57°00'00", W95°00'00" - W74°00'00"
Country of Publication: United States
Secondary Affiliation: GeoRef, Copyright 2017, American Geosciences Institute. Abstract, Copyright, Society of Economic Geologists. Reference includes data from Bibliography and Index of North American Geology, U. S. Geological Survey, Reston, VA, United States
Update Code: 1965
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