Arid
DOI10.1016/j.oregeorev.2014.09.027
Physiographic and tectonic settings of high-sulfidation epithermal gold-silver deposits of the Andes and their controls on mineralizing processes
Bissig, Thomas1; Clark, Alan H.2; Rainbow, Amelia2; Montgomery, Allan
通讯作者Bissig, Thomas
来源期刊ORE GEOLOGY REVIEWS
ISSN0169-1368
EISSN1872-7360
出版年2015
卷号65页码:327-364
英文摘要

Gold and silver ores in the vast majority of Andean high-sulfidation epithermal Au-Ag deposits occur at high present day elevations and typically 200-500 m below low relief landforms situated at 3500 to 5200 m a.s.l. Most deposits are middle Miocene and younger and include, El Indio, Tambo, Pascua-Lama, Veladero (El Indio belt, Chile/Argentina), Cerro de Pasco (Central Peru), Pierina, Lagunas Norte, Yanacocha (northern Peru), Quimsacocha (Ecuador), and the California-Vetas mining district (Santander, Colombia), jointly accounting for >130 Moz Au resources. Slightly older examples are only preserved in the Atacama Desert and include the middle Eocene El Guanaco and El Hueso and the late Oligocene/early Miocene La Coipa deposits. The absence of Paleocene and older high-sulfidation epithermal deposits can be explained by limited preservation potential imposed by transpressional tectonics within overall contractile episodes and surface uplift. These conditions prevailed predominantly in segments of shallow-angle subduction of the Nazca or Caribbean plate below the South American continent, a tectonic setting also common for porphyry-style Cu (-Au, Mo) deposits. Stratovolcanoes are uncommon ore hosts and volcanic rocks coincident with mineralization are in most cases volumetrically restricted or absent, recording the terminal stages of local arc magmatism. However, dacitic domes are important at, e.g., Yanacocha and La Coipa. At Lagunas Norte, a small stratovolcano largely pre-dating but temporally overlapping with mineralization occurs immediately east of the deposit and volcanic sector collapse may have occurred during hydrothermal activity.


Mineralization is typically located near the backscarp of pediments or the heads of valleys incising now high-elevation, low-relief surfaces. In the California-Vetas Mining District and El Indio belt, hydrothermal alunite ages become generally younger upstream along the incising valleys, indicating that hydrothermal activity and, by inference, ore deposition were facilitated by erosion. The lowering of the water table and reduction of hydrostatic and lithostatic pressure at these sites of high local relief are believed to have enhanced both boiling and mixing of magmatic with meteoric fluids, ultimately enhancing ore deposition.


The host rock composition, permeability and location of the water table control the distribution of alteration zones and ore. Intermediate volcanic rocks are the most common ore-hosts but they typically pre-date mineralization by several Ma. However, high-sulfidation epithermal mineralization can be hosted in any conceivable rock type including high grade metamorphic rocks (California-Vetas mining district), significantly older plutonic rocks (Pascua-Lama) or quartzites (Lagunas Norte). Large vuggy quartz alteration zones and commonly oxidized low-grade large-tonnage mineralization are best developed in relatively permeable volcaniclastic rocks or hydrothermal breccia bodies, whereas coherent volcanic, plutonic, or metamorphic rocks may host fault- and breccia-controlled ores. The near-surface steam-heated zone can attain a thickness of several hundred meters in dry climates (e.g. Veladero, Pascua-Lama, Tambo) but is typically poorly developed and less than 20 m thick in humid climatic zones.


The physiographic and tectonic settings of high-sulfidation epithermal deposits are distinct from low-sulfidation epithermal districts such as those of Patagonia, El Penon (Chile) or Fruta del Norte (Ecuador). The latter range to significantly older ages (Jurassic to early Eocene) occur at mainly lower elevations and were emplaced in extensional settings. A temporal coincidence between uplift, erosion and mineralizing processes as well as a spatial and temporal association with porphyry style mineralization is not evident for these low-sulfidation districts. (C) 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.


英文关键词High-sulfidation Epithermal Andes Landscape evolution Erosion Uplift Flat subduction Neogene
类型Review
语种英语
国家Canada
收录类别SCI-E
WOS记录号WOS:000348084400020
WOS关键词PASCUA AU-AG ; STABLE-ISOTOPE GEOCHEMISTRY ; PORPHYRY CU-MO ; ACID-SULFATE ALTERATION ; SOUTHERN CENTRAL ANDES ; RE-OS GEOCHRONOLOGY ; FLAT-SLAB REGION ; MINING DISTRICT ; EASTERN CORDILLERA ; FLUID INCLUSION
WOS类目Geology ; Mineralogy ; Mining & Mineral Processing
WOS研究方向Geology ; Mineralogy ; Mining & Mineral Processing
资源类型期刊论文
条目标识符http://119.78.100.177/qdio/handle/2XILL650/189431
作者单位1.Univ British Columbia, Mineral Deposit Res Unit, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z4, Canada;
2.Queens Univ, Kingston, ON K7L 3N6, Canada
推荐引用方式
GB/T 7714
Bissig, Thomas,Clark, Alan H.,Rainbow, Amelia,et al. Physiographic and tectonic settings of high-sulfidation epithermal gold-silver deposits of the Andes and their controls on mineralizing processes[J],2015,65:327-364.
APA Bissig, Thomas,Clark, Alan H.,Rainbow, Amelia,&Montgomery, Allan.(2015).Physiographic and tectonic settings of high-sulfidation epithermal gold-silver deposits of the Andes and their controls on mineralizing processes.ORE GEOLOGY REVIEWS,65,327-364.
MLA Bissig, Thomas,et al."Physiographic and tectonic settings of high-sulfidation epithermal gold-silver deposits of the Andes and their controls on mineralizing processes".ORE GEOLOGY REVIEWS 65(2015):327-364.
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