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GEOREF RECORD

The Neoarchean conglomerate-hosted gold of the West Pilbara Craton, Western Australia

Sam C. Spinks, Mark A. Pearce, Margaux Le Vaillant, David Fox, Ian M. Tyler, Belinda Godel, Jessica Stromberg, Ed Mead and Alistair J. R. White
The Neoarchean conglomerate-hosted gold of the West Pilbara Craton, Western Australia
Economic Geology and the Bulletin of the Society of Economic Geologists (December 2020) 116 (3): 629-650

Abstract

Recently discovered Au in boulder conglomerate between the Mesoarchean West Pilbara superterrane basement and the overlying volcano-sedimentary stratigraphy of the Neoarchean Fortescue Group in Western Australia has renewed comparisons with the Witwatersrand conglomerate Au deposits in South Africa. As such, this has reignited the question of the Pilbara and Kaapvaal cratons being linked as part of the postulated Vaalbara continent during the Archean. However, little is known about the origin of the Pilbara conglomerate Au and its host conglomerates, as they are hitherto unstudied, and their formation and/or source is uncertain. Here we present a detailed study on the textures, composition, and sedimentology of one newly discovered Pilbara conglomerate Au deposit at the base of the Neoarchean Fortescue Group in the northwestern Pilbara craton. The Pilbara conglomerate Au occurrences are characteristically Ag-bearing but Hg-poor polycrystalline discoid masses that are overgrown by Au-poor chloritic halos, which are further enveloped by a hydrothermal alteration halo of disseminated Au within chlorite. Both the discoids and the auriferous chlorite halo are Ag bearing, with up to approximately 9 wt % Ag, consistent with a hydrothermal (orogenic) origin. The discoids do not display any physical or chemical evidence for sedimentary transport; thus, their formation (placer versus hydrothermal) remains unclear. However, the position of the Au in the conglomerate, limited to the basal section of the conglomerate, is difficult to account for in a purely hydrothermal deposit model. We argue the Pilbara conglomerate Au represents a modified placer deposit from a primary orogenic Au source, with surface evidence for sedimentation removed by partial dissolution during later hydrothermal alteration in the host conglomerate and the crystalline basement. While the basal Fortescue Group conglomerate Au shares commonalities with the time equivalent (> approximately 2.7 Ga) Venterspost Conglomerate Formation, which overlies the Witwatersrand Supergroup, inconsistencies remain, with different Au chemistries and tectonic, magmatic, sedimentary, and metamorphic-metallogenic histories of the Pilbara and Kaapvaal cratons prior to deposition of the >2.7 Ga conglomerate sequences. This collectively indicates the drivers of Au metallogenesis and ultimate Au deposition in conglomerate facies were fundamentally different in the Pilbara and Kaapvaal cratons.


ISSN: 0361-0128
EISSN: 1554-0774
Coden: ECGLAL
Serial Title: Economic Geology and the Bulletin of the Society of Economic Geologists
Serial Volume: 116
Serial Issue: 3
Title: The Neoarchean conglomerate-hosted gold of the West Pilbara Craton, Western Australia
Affiliation: Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation Mineral Resources, Australian Resources Research Centre, Perth, West. Aust., Australia
Pages: 629-650
Published: 20201218
Text Language: English
Publisher: Economic Geology Publishing Company, Lancaster, PA, United States
Number of pages: 22
References: 66
Accession Number: 2021-011647
Categories: Economic geology, geology of ore deposits
Document Type: Serial
Bibliographic Level: Analytic
Illustration Description: illus. incl. strat. cols., 12 plates, geol. sketch maps
S21°19'60" - S20°30'00", E116°30'00" - E117°30'00"
Secondary Affiliation: Artemis Resources, AUS, Australia
Country of Publication: United States
Secondary Affiliation: GeoRef, Copyright 2022, American Geosciences Institute.
Update Code: 202108

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