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Carlin Mine
Nevada’s Carlin-Type Gold Deposits: What We’ve Learned During the Past 10 to 15 Years
Abstract This contribution provides brief introductions to research on Carlin-type gold deposits completed since publication of the 2005 review paper on the deposits in the Economic Geology 100th Anniversary Volume ( Cline et al., 2005 ). Major advances in our understanding of the deposits have resulted from these studies that cover a broad range of topics, from the geology of deposits to recent discoveries and current geologic models. Studies of host rocks include expanded application of sequence stratigraphy that is refining our understanding of favorable host rocks, now known to have formed on shallow carbonate platforms during lowstands as well as in deep-water slope to basin environments. Sparse igneous dikes at the surface that were emplaced coincident with formation of deposits of the Carlin trend indicate that a batholith of about 1,000 km 2 underlies the trend. Reactivated and inverted normal Neoproterozoic faults formed anticlines and fed ore fluids into structurally prepared reactive rock types. Collaborative district studies determined that structural preparation of host rocks along the Carlin trend occurred during three discrete contractional events followed by Eocene extension and coincident mineralization. Ore and alteration studies identified systematic trace element and sulfur isotope zoning in ore-stage pyrite rims that formed from temporally discrete ore fluids fed by separate structures. Deposit-scale studies determined that ore minerals in shallowly formed deposits are similar to late ore-stage minerals of typical, more deeply formed Carlin-type gold deposits. Breccias containing high-grade ore formed both by replacement and by calcite dissolution and collapse processes. Halos useful in vectoring toward mineralization include rock quality designation values, trace elements above mineralization in premineral rock and in postmineral clay, oxygen isotope ratios, and soil, soil gas, vegetation, and groundwater chemistry. Isotopic studies have indicated relative timing of ore fluid movement through discrete structures. Deposit ages coincide with spatially related intrusion ages, from about 42 to 35 Ma, and both young from northeast to southwest. Magmatism and deposit formation are interpreted as related to Eocene delamination of subcontinental lithospheric mantle. Apatite fission track data indicate that the Betze-Post deposit, which contained >1, 240 tonnes (40 Moz) of gold, formed in <15,000 to 45,000 years. New geologic maps illustrate structural and stratigraphic relationships that will contribute to exploration efforts and potential new discoveries. Recent Nevada discoveries include South Arturo on the northern Carlin trend, the Long Canyon deposit in Cambrian-Ordovician rocks in the newly recognized Pequop district in northeastern Nevada, the giant Goldrush deposit on the Battle Mountain-Eureka trend, and the North Bullion deposit at the southern end of the Carlin trend. Two potential new districts of deposits are being actively explored in the Yukon Territory, Canada, and the Golden Triangle, southern China. Deposits in the Golden Triangle and prospects in the Yukon are currently much smaller than deposits in Nevada, and the presence of proximal coeval magmatism, now recognized in Nevada, is unclear. Studies of some of the Chinese deposits indicate that they formed at conditions intermediate to Carlin-type and orogenic deposits. Recently published geologic models propose that either shallow, basin-related processes or deep magmatic processes provided gold for the Nevada deposits. Studies evaluating the Harrison Pass pluton and the Emigrant Pass volcanic rocks, both the same age as the Carlin deposits, addressed the magmatic model and provide information about potential magmatic ore fluids and systems that may have formed the deposits.
The Carlin Gold System: Applications to Exploration in Nevada and Beyond
Abstract Mining of Carlin-type gold deposits in Nevada has made the United States one of the leading gold producers in the world for almost four decades. These deposits constitute an endowment of ~255 Moz (7,931 tonnes) of gold, of which 89% occurs in four main clusters of deposits: the Carlin trend, Getchell, Cortez, and Jerritt Canyon. These four clusters share many characteristics, including (1) formation during a narrow time interval (42–34 Ma), (2) lithologic and structural controls to fluid flow and ore deposition, (3) geochemical signature of the ores, (4) hydrothermal alteration and ore paragenesis, (5) relatively low temperatures and salinities of ore fluids, (6) fairly shallow depths of formation, and (7) lack of mineral and elemental zoning. A mineral systems approach to exploring for Carlin-type gold deposits in Nevada and elsewhere is presented, in which critical processes are laid out: (1) development of source(s) for gold and other critical components of the ore fluid, (2) formation of fluid pathways, (3) water-rock interaction and gold deposition, and (4) a tectonic trigger. The critical processes are then converted into a practical targeting system for Carlin-type gold deposits within and outside of Nevada, ranging from regional to district to drill target (<~20 km 2 ) scales. The critical processes of the Carlin mineral system are translated into targeting elements and mappable targeting criteria. At the regional scale, targeting elements for magmatic sources of gold and ore fluid components include (1) intrusive centers with a mantle component to the magmas, (2) processes that could result in metasomatized subcontinental lithospheric mantle, (3) high-K, H 2 O-rich calc-alkaline magmas, and (4) evidence for fluid release. For crustal sources of gold, targeting elements include (1) carbonaceous sedimentary rocks with diagenetic/syngenetic sulfides enriched in Au-As-Hg-Tl-Sb-(Te) and sulfates and (2) a heat source to drive convection of meteoric and/or formation of metamorphic fluids. Targeting elements for fluid pathways at the regional scale include (1) basement suture zones and rifted continental margins, (2) long-lived upper crustal faults that may be linked to basement faults, and (3) a reduced crustal section to ensure long transport of gold by sulfide-rich fluids. Targeting elements at the regional scale for water-rock interaction and gold deposition include (1) passive margin dominated by carbonate rocks, (2) contractional deformation and formation of regional thrust faults and fold belts, and (3) a regional Au-As-Hg-Tl-Sb-(Te) geochemical signature. Targeting elements for tectonic triggers include (1) changes from contraction to extension, (2) periods of intense magmatism, especially related to slab rollback, and (3) plate reorganization. At the district scale, targeting elements for fluid pathways include (1) old reactivated high-angle fault zones, (2) zones of abundant low-displacement, high-angle extensional faults, (3) fault intersections, and (4) lithologic rheology contrasts, such as preore intrusions and contact aureoles. For water-rock interaction and gold deposition, targeting elements include (1) carbonate-bearing stratigraphy, (2) low-angle features that could divert upwelling fluids out of high-angle faults and into reactive wall rocks, (3) hydrothermal system of targeted age, (4) alteration consistent with wall-rock reaction with acidic, sulfide-rich hydrothermal fluids, and (5) Fe-rich rocks in the stratigraphic section, which will drive sulfidation. At the drill target scale, the targeting elements for fluid pathways are zones of increased fault/fracture permeability. The targeting elements for water-rock interaction and gold deposition include (1) zones of increased low-angle permeability in carbonate rocks proximal to high-angle faults, (2) favorable alteration, especially hydrothermal carbonate dissolution and silicification, (3) Fe-rich rocks including ferroan carbonates and mafic volcanic rocks and intrusions, (4) favorable Au-As-Hg-Tl-Sb-(Te) geochemical signature with low base metals and Ag/Au ratios, and (5) favorable mineralization, especially arsenian pyrite with textures and chemistry consistent with Carlin-type deposits.
Abstract Carlin, epithermal, and orogenic gold deposits, today mined almost exclusively for their gold content, have similar suites of anomalous trace elements that reflect similar low-salinity ore fluids and thermal conditions of metal transport and deposition. Many of these trace elements are commonly referred to as critical or near-critical elements or metals and have been locally recovered, although typically in small amounts, by historic mining activities. These elements include As, Bi, Hg, In, Sb, Se, Te, Tl, and W. Most of these elements are now solely recovered as by-products from the milling of large-tonnage, base metal-rich ore deposits, such as porphyry and volcanogenic massive sulfide deposits. A combination of dominance of the world market by a single country for a single commodity and a growing demand for many of the critical to near-critical elements could lead to future recovery of such elements from select epithermal, orogenic, or Carlin-type gold deposits. Antimony continues to be recovered from some orogenic gold deposits and tellurium could potentially be a primary commodity from some such deposits. Tellurium and indium in sphalerite-rich ores have been recovered in the past and could be future commodities recovered from epithermal ores. Carlin-type gold deposits in Nevada are enriched in and may be a future source for As, Hg, Sb, and/or Tl. Some of the Devonian carbonaceous host rocks in the Carlin districts are sufficiently enriched in many trace elements, including Hg, Se, and V, such that they also could become resources. Thallium may be locally enriched to economic levels in Carlin-type deposits and it has been produced from Carlin-like deposits elsewhere in the world (e.g., Alsar, southern Macedonia; Lanmuchang, Guizhou province, China). Mercury continues to be recovered from shallow-level epithermal deposits, as well as a by-product of many Carlin-type deposits where refractory ore is roasted to oxidize carbon and pyrite, and mercury is then captured in air pollution control devices.
Controversies on the Origin of World-Class Gold Deposits, Part I: Carlin-type Gold Deposits in Nevada
Timing Constraints of Gold Mineralization along the Carlin Trend Utilizing Apatite Fission-Track, 40 Ar/ 39 Ar, and Apatite (U-Th)/He Methods
AN EVALUATION OF FLUID INCLUSION MICROTHERMOMETRIC DATA FOR ORPIMENT-REALGAR-CALCITE-BARITE-GOLD MINERALIZATION AT THE BETZE AND CARLIN MINES, NEVADA
Carlin gold deposits, Nevada; origin in a deep zone of mixing between normally pressured and overpressured fluids
Abstract Interstate 80 between Elko and Carlin, Nevada, follows the valley of the Humboldt River. The Humboldt drains a 17,000 square mile basin along its 275 mile course, located entirely within the State of Nevada. While barely a trickle of water in late summer, spring floods may swell the river well over its banks. The average annual discharge is 256,000 acre-feet, although this varies from 25,000 acre-feet to 635,000 acre-feet annually. The Humboldt River played an important part in the history of the American West during the early years of westward settlement. In 1928, Peter Skene Ogden led a party of Hudson’s Bay Company trappers south from Idaho, following the Humboldt to the present location of Winnemucca. Ogden trapped there briefly, returning to Utah for the winter. The following spring, he returned to follow the Humboldt to the marshes west beyond the Stillwater Range, where the Humboldt spreads and disappears into the desert sand. For ten years, British and American trappers worked the river, then called Mary’s River. By 1838, the beaver were largely trapped out, the market for beaver felt hats was waning, and the American west was about to change. Three years later, the first party of immigrants to California, on the advice of mountain men, followed the Humboldt west from near its source to the Humboldt Sink, then crossed the Forty-Mile Desert to reach the Carson River and the Sierra Nevada. In 1845, John C. Fremont began his explorations and publicized the desert country and the Humboldt Trail.
Abstract Interstate 80 between Elko and Carlin, Nevada, follows the valley of the Humboldt River. The Humboldt drains a 17,000 square mile basin along its 275 mile course, located entirely within the State of Nevada. While barely a trickle of water in late summer, spring floods may swell the river well over its banks. The average annual discharge is 256,000 acre-feet, although this varies from 25,000 acre-feet to 635,000 acre-feet annually. The Humboldt River played an important part in the history of the American West during the early years of westward settlement. In 1928, Peter Skene Ogden led a party of Hudson’s Bay Company trappers south from Idaho, following the Humboldt to the present location of Winnemucca. Ogden trapped there briefly, returning to Utah for the winter. The following spring, he returned to follow the Humboldt to the marshes west beyond the Stillwater Range, where the Humboldt spreads and disappears into the desert sand. For ten years, British and American trappers worked the river, then called Mary’s River. By 1838, the beaver were largely trapped out, the market for beaver felt hats was waning, and the American west was about to change. Three years later, the first party of immigrants to California, on the advice of mountain men, followed the Humboldt west from near its source to the Humboldt Sink, then crossed the Forty-Mile Desert to reach the Carson River and the Sierra Nevada. In 1845, John C. Fremont began his explorations and publicized the desert country and the Humboldt Trail.