Update search
- Abstract
- Affiliation
- All
- Authors
- Book Series
- DOI
- EISBN
- EISSN
- Full Text
- GeoRef ID
- ISBN
- ISSN
- Issue
- Keyword (GeoRef Descriptor)
- Meeting Information
- Report #
- Title
- Volume
- Abstract
- Affiliation
- All
- Authors
- Book Series
- DOI
- EISBN
- EISSN
- Full Text
- GeoRef ID
- ISBN
- ISSN
- Issue
- Keyword (GeoRef Descriptor)
- Meeting Information
- Report #
- Title
- Volume
- Abstract
- Affiliation
- All
- Authors
- Book Series
- DOI
- EISBN
- EISSN
- Full Text
- GeoRef ID
- ISBN
- ISSN
- Issue
- Keyword (GeoRef Descriptor)
- Meeting Information
- Report #
- Title
- Volume
- Abstract
- Affiliation
- All
- Authors
- Book Series
- DOI
- EISBN
- EISSN
- Full Text
- GeoRef ID
- ISBN
- ISSN
- Issue
- Keyword (GeoRef Descriptor)
- Meeting Information
- Report #
- Title
- Volume
- Abstract
- Affiliation
- All
- Authors
- Book Series
- DOI
- EISBN
- EISSN
- Full Text
- GeoRef ID
- ISBN
- ISSN
- Issue
- Keyword (GeoRef Descriptor)
- Meeting Information
- Report #
- Title
- Volume
- Abstract
- Affiliation
- All
- Authors
- Book Series
- DOI
- EISBN
- EISSN
- Full Text
- GeoRef ID
- ISBN
- ISSN
- Issue
- Keyword (GeoRef Descriptor)
- Meeting Information
- Report #
- Title
- Volume
NARROW
Format
Article Type
Journal
Publisher
Section
GeoRef Subject
-
all geography including DSDP/ODP Sites and Legs
-
Mexico
-
Chihuahua Mexico (1)
-
-
South America
-
Andes (2)
-
Peru (5)
-
-
-
commodities
-
metal ores
-
gold ores (1)
-
lead ores (2)
-
lead-zinc deposits (1)
-
polymetallic ores (3)
-
silver ores (3)
-
zinc ores (2)
-
-
mineral deposits, genesis (1)
-
-
elements, isotopes
-
metals
-
arsenic (1)
-
lead (1)
-
precious metals (1)
-
silver (1)
-
-
-
geochronology methods
-
K/Ar (2)
-
-
geologic age
-
Cenozoic
-
Tertiary
-
Neogene
-
Miocene
-
upper Miocene (1)
-
-
-
upper Tertiary (1)
-
-
-
Paleozoic (1)
-
-
igneous rocks
-
igneous rocks
-
volcanic rocks
-
pyroclastics
-
tuff (1)
-
-
-
-
-
minerals
-
antimonides (1)
-
arsenates (1)
-
bismuthides (1)
-
carbonates (1)
-
minerals (1)
-
oxides (1)
-
silicates
-
orthosilicates
-
sorosilicates
-
chevkinite group
-
perrierite (1)
-
-
-
-
-
sulfates (1)
-
sulfides
-
galena (1)
-
orpiment (1)
-
pyrite (2)
-
-
sulfosalts
-
sulfantimonites
-
boulangerite (1)
-
geocronite (1)
-
miargyrite (1)
-
-
sulfarsenites
-
dufrenoysite (1)
-
geocronite (1)
-
-
sulfobismuthites
-
matildite (1)
-
-
-
-
Primary terms
-
absolute age (2)
-
Cenozoic
-
Tertiary
-
Neogene
-
Miocene
-
upper Miocene (1)
-
-
-
upper Tertiary (1)
-
-
-
crystal chemistry (1)
-
crystal structure (2)
-
economic geology (1)
-
faults (1)
-
folds (1)
-
fractures (1)
-
geochronology (2)
-
igneous rocks
-
volcanic rocks
-
pyroclastics
-
tuff (1)
-
-
-
-
lineation (1)
-
metal ores
-
gold ores (1)
-
lead ores (2)
-
lead-zinc deposits (1)
-
polymetallic ores (3)
-
silver ores (3)
-
zinc ores (2)
-
-
metals
-
arsenic (1)
-
lead (1)
-
precious metals (1)
-
silver (1)
-
-
Mexico
-
Chihuahua Mexico (1)
-
-
mineral deposits, genesis (1)
-
minerals (1)
-
orogeny (1)
-
Paleozoic (1)
-
paragenesis (1)
-
phase equilibria (2)
-
plate tectonics (1)
-
sedimentary rocks
-
clastic rocks
-
conglomerate (1)
-
-
-
South America
-
Andes (2)
-
Peru (5)
-
-
structural analysis (1)
-
structural geology (1)
-
tectonics
-
neotectonics (1)
-
-
-
sedimentary rocks
-
sedimentary rocks
-
clastic rocks
-
conglomerate (1)
-
-
-
-
sedimentary structures
-
striations (1)
-
GeoRef Categories
Era and Period
Epoch and Age
Book Series
Date
Availability
Huachocolpa
The paragenetic association and compositional zoning of lead sulfosalts at Huachocolpa, Peru Available to Purchase
Chronology of late Tertiary volcanism and mineralization, Huachocolpa District, central Peru Available to Purchase
The Miocene Metallogenic Belt of Central and Northern Perú Available to Purchase
Abstract The Miocene metallogenic belt of central and northern Perú, extending for at least 900 km along the Western Cordillera and the adjacent high plateaus province, is defined by a large number of hydrothermal mineral deposits of different types that formed between about 6 and 20 Ma. The belt, centered east of the Mesozoic and early Paleogene Coastal batholith, is on mature continental crust that has undergone multiple episodes of compressive deformation from at least middle Paleozoic to latest Neogene time. Mineralization began before the early Miocene Quechua I compressive event and spanned later Quechua II tectonism. Mineral deposits are mostly hosted by shelf carbonates and other sedimentary rocks of Late Triassic,Jurassic, and Cretaceous age and by volcanic and intrusive rocks mainly of Neogene age. Base metal and precious metal mineralization was intimately associated in time and space with the eruption of calc-alkalic volcanic rocks of intermediate composition and the emplacement of mineralogically and chemically similar dikes and stocks. These igneous rocks are moderately potassic and the few available data suggest relatively nonradiogenic Sr, Nd, and Pb isotope compositions. Mineral deposits range from porphyry and associated proximal skarn deposits to polymetallic, precious metal, and mercury deposits formed at relatively lower temperatures. Porphyry deposits include the La Granja Cu porphyry, the Au-bearing Michiquillay Cu porphyry, the Mo-bearing Cu porphyritic rocks of Toro Mocho, Pashpap, and Páraq, the Mundo Nuevo-Tamboras-Compaccha Mo-W porphyry system, and the Cerro Corona, Minas Conga, Collpayoc, Laguna Chamis, Carhuacayán, and Puy-Puy Au-Cu porphyry deposits. Many of the classic base and precious metal deposits of central and northern Perú are within zoned polymetallic districts, some with one or more porphyry centers. Many districts have veins or replacement bodies containing enargite in their central parts, and a number are characterized by deposits of both vein and limestone replacement type. At a number of polymetallic districts, for example, Julcani, Yauricocha, Morococha, Casapalca, Huarón, Raura, Antamina, Pasto Bueno, Quiruvilca, Algamarca, and Hualgayoc, stocks containing high-salinity fluid inclusions are exposed, known from drill-hole data, or can be confidently inferred from fluid-inclusion or isotope data. Vein and limestone-replacement Pb-Zn ± Ag ± Cu deposits are common, and range from vertically persistent, high-temperature deposits, such as the veins of Casapalca, to largely stratabound deposits such as Cercapuquio and Azulcocha, that were formed at temperatures below 200°C. Although certain writers have interpreted some manto deposits to be diagenetic or syndiagenetic, field relations and lead isotope compositions argue strongly for an epigenetic origin. Vein systems or epithermal paragenetic stages in which silver is the economically most important metal, such as those of Milluachaqui, Millotingo, and Colqui, typically contain appreciable amounts of base metals and can best be considered a variant of the polymetallic vein group. The Huancavelica mercury deposit represents an extremely large geochemical anomaly, perhaps developed at the top of a polymetallic system. High-sulfidation-type Au-Ag deposits, such as Pierina and those of the Yanacocha district, are economically important. At Tantahuatay and Colquijirca, oxidized Au-bearing, vuggy silica rock occurs at higher elevations than surrounding, zoned, enargite-cored Cu-Pb-Zn-Ag veins and strata-bound replacement deposits. In contrast to the association of precious metals with enargite, tetrahedrite, and barite at Julcani and other reduced-type deposits, in moderate- to high-grade ores at Pierina and probably certain deposits in the Tantahuatay and Yanacocha districts, most of the gold is very late, following initial quartz-alunite-pyrite alteration, the destruction of alunite to form vuggy silica rock, and the subsequent deposition of pyrite and enargite accompanied by small amounts of gold. Gold and silver in economic quantities were then introduced by compositionally distinct, late fluids that oxidized pyrite and enargite, leached Cu, Zn, Se, Te, Tl, and other elements, and introduced Hg, Pb, Bi, Sb, and large amounts of barite. An analogous case for a distinct, compositionally different Au-Ag mineralizing pulse perhaps can be made for the sedimentary rock-hosted gold deposits of Purísima Concepción in Yauricocha. The ubiquitous presence of enargite, and the spatial and temporal association in several districts of pyrite + enargite, with modest gold content, and oxidized Au-rich ores, support the interpretation that bulk-mineable, volcanic-hosted gold deposits of a high-sulfidation type represent one of the many types of deposits related to the general class of porphyry-related, zoned polymetallic systems. The sandstone-hosted gold deposits of northern Perú also appear to be related to subjacent magmatic systems, although there are certain geological, mineralogical, and chemical differences from both volcanic-hosted, high-sulfidation and Purísima-type gold deposits. High W and Sn content of many of the sandstone-hosted ores of the Angasmarca district suggest that they are high-level manifestations of subjacent W-Mo ±Au systems such as are exposed at the nearby, more deeply seated Mundo Nuevo-Tamboras-Compaccha and Pasto Bueno districts. Several subsidiary belts are recognized within the Miocene metallogenic belt. A group of deposits in northern Perú, including the polymetallic deposits of the Quiruvilca district, the several Cu-Mo porphyry systems at Pashpap, and the Pierina high-sulfidation Au deposit, defines the 13 to 15 Ma or older Quiruvilca-Pierina subbelt in the western part of the metallogenic belt. The provisional Michiquillay-El Toro subbelt, including the Michiquillay Cu porphyry, the El Toro Au prospect, and probably the Au-Cu porphyry systems of the Minas Conga district, appears to have formed in northern Perú along the eastern margin of the metallogenic belt between about 18 and 20 Ma. A narrow, late Miocene subbelt that comprises a number of deposits dated at less than about 10 Ma, including Huachocolpa, Yauricocha, San Cristóbal, Morococha, Puy-Puy, Carhuacayán, Huarón, Raura, Huanzalá, Antamina, Pasto Bueno, and Angasmarca, extends from the Huachocolpa district at the southern end of the belt to the latitude of Santiago de Chuco in northern Perú. Deposits of the late Miocene subbelt postdate the 9 to 10 Ma Quechua II compressive pulse, and the initiation, location, and narrowness of the subbelt may have been related in some manner to this tectonic event. Intersections of successive, magmatic mineral axes with northeast-trending and other fault systems of probable crustal scale may have combined to influence the location of individual mineral deposits or clusters of deposits. Mineralization had ceased, and possibly was terminated, by the 5 to 7 Ma Quechua III compressive event. The emplacement of the 5.2 Ma late phase of the Cordillera Blanca batholith and the eruption of approximately coeval units of silicic ash-flow tuff and lava in northern and central Perú may reflect the subsequent relaxation of compressive stress, leading to the switching of axes of least and greatest principal stress indicated by 4 Ma north-south-trending dike systems in central Perú. Four important older districts within the Miocene metallogenic belt (Quicay, ca. 37.5 Ma; Uchucchacua, ca. 24.5 Ma), or bordering it on the east (Atacocha and Milpo, ca. 29-30 Ma), are related to older, and perhaps in part less intense, periods of magmatic activity. Although gold deposits may prove to be more important in northern than in central Perú, there is little indication that the concentrations of other metals vary markedly along or normal to the Miocene metallogenic belt. For example, porphyry molybdenum deposits are found in both the eastern and western parts of the belt. Moreover, particular types of deposits do not appear to be preferentially restricted to a given time period: several sandstone-hosted gold deposits in northern Perú have yielded ages ranging from less than 9 to greater than 18 Ma, and Au-bearing porphyry systems include examples of early, middle, and late Miocene age. Local geology and depth of erosion may be more important controls of deposit type. If future work shows that individual subbelts are as narrow and continuous as the present data suggest, areas within the narrow subbelts may prove to be the most prospective for mineral exploration.
Multiple pulses of Neogene compressive deformation in the Ayacucho intermontane basin, Andes of central Peru Available to Purchase
The Society of Economic Geologists 2000 Awards R.A.F. Penrose Gold Medal for 2000 Citation of Alberto Benavides de la Quintana Available to Purchase
Acceptance of the R.A.F. Penrose Gold Medal for 2000 Available to Purchase
Undulatory Silver-Rich Polymetallic Veins of the Castrovirreyna District, Central Peru: Fault Growth and Mineralization in a Perturbed Local Stress Field Available to Purchase
Anorpiment, As 2 S 3 , the triclinic dimorph of orpiment Available to Purchase
New Mineral Names Available to Purchase
Gold in Perú Available to Purchase
SEG Newsletter 17 (April) Available to Purchase
A solution model for high-temperature PbS-AgSbS 2 -AgBiS 2 galena Available to Purchase
Porphyry-Epithermal Transition, Cajamarca Region, Northern Peru Available to Purchase
Abstract At least 14 porphyry copper-gold deposits and 19 epithermal gold deposits are known within 60 km of Cajamarca. The partly explored porphyry deposits vary in grade, Cu-Au-Mo proportions, and depth of erosion. Associated epithermal mineralization occurs at Perol, Peña de las Águilas, Kupfertal, Yanacocha Norte, Maqui Maqui, and Pampa Verde but not at Michiquillay, El Galeno, Chailhuagón, Cerro Corona, La Sorpresa, Colpayoc, and Chamis. These deposits are associated with Miocene magmatic activity, northwest-trending folds and thrusts, and northeast-trending faults. In the porphyry deposits, granular A quartz veins, associated with K-feldspar-biotite alteration and disseminated chalcopyrite-magnetite with bornite or pyrite, are typically present within and about multiple coeval porphyry intrusions. Banded quartz veins occur near the tops of some shallowly eroded systems, and late sericite-pyrite ± chalcopyrite is superimposed on most. Epithermal mineralization is mostly of high-sulfidation character, with pyrite-enargite-covellite typically underlying oxide Au zones leached of Cu. Epithermal Au-Cu is associated with multiple stages of brecciation and intense silicification, zoned outward and downward with decreasing SiO 2 and Au through quartz-pyrophyllite-diaspore-alunite-dickite to quartz-alunite and kaolinite. Structurally controlled, high-grade Au is apparently late and associated locally with intermediate-sulfidation assemblages, barite, and chalcedony. The transition between porphyry and epithermal environments is exposed at Perol and Huaylamachay, La Zanja, and especially Tantahuatay and Yanacocha. At Perol and Huaylamachay, porphyry gold-copper deposits are adjacent to generally contemporaneous volcanic vents altered to quartz-alunite with minor structures containing quartz-pyrophyllite-alunite-Au. At Perol, the dacitic vent is intruded by a later mineralized porphyry, whereas at Huaylamachay the vent breccia contains clasts with quartz-molybdenite veins and is cut by banded quartz veins, which we interpret as indicating a second, deeper porphyry Au system. At Tantahuatay, an andesitic dome complex is pervasively brecciated and altered to quartz-alunite-pyrophyllite-diaspore ± dickite, with extensive pyrite-enargite-covellite-(bornite) veins and disseminations beneath Aurich oxide mineralization. A gusano texture of soft, round patches of pyrophyllite-diaspore and/or alunite in a silicified matrix is widespread and associated with anomalous concentrations of Mo. Only one of several drill holes to 600-m depth encountered A quartz veins and minor porphyry intrusions. This hole provides evidence for prograde advance of quartz veining associated with one or more porphyry intrusions into the epithermal environment and subsequent retrograde collapse. At Yanacocha, the most abundant evidence of direct, albeit complex, spatial and temporal relationships between multiple centers of epithermal mineralization and porphyry intrusion and mineralization has been partially deciphered. At Kupfertal, the matrix of gusano alteration above the top of the porphyry becomes increasingly silicified and patchy downward, developing very contorted wormy quartz veins that overlap the top of A quartz veins. Intense pyritic quartz-pyrophyllite-diaspore-alunite and underlying sericite alteration is superimposed on K-feldspar-biotite alteration of the early stage. Fluid inclusions in quartz are vapor dominant, with downward-increasing proportions of high-salinity inclusions and amounts of minute relict chalcopyrite ± bornite grains “locked” in A vein quartz. A-veined and advanced argillic-altered xenoliths in pyroclastic rocks intruded by porphyries and hosting gold mineralization demonstrate multiple generations of porphyry and epithermal mineralization. Early Cu and Au of the porphyry event appear to have been remobilized and incorporated into the overlying epithermal system.