{"title":"西澳大利亚Abra沉积置换Pb-Ag-Cu-Au矿床地球物理表达的新进展","authors":"D. Stannard, J. Meyers, E. Turner, A. Scopel","doi":"10.1080/22020586.2019.12073204","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Summary The Abra sedimentary replacement Pb-Ag-Cu-Au deposit is located in the Paleoproterozoic Edmund Basin, 900km NNE of Perth. Mineralisation at Abra has no surface expression and the deposit was discovered in 1981 by drill testing coincident magnetic and gravity anomaly highs. The deposit is hosted within siliciclastic and carbonate deposits of the Edmund Group and consists of a stratabound apron of lower grade Pb-Ag-Ba mineralisation in a laminated iron oxide and barite altered siltstone unit that overlies a funnel shaped feeder zone of chlorite altered, brecciated and veined carbonaceous siltstone containing high-grade Pb-Ag in the core, transitioning to Pb-Cu and Cu-Au at depth. As at December 2018, the Abra deposit remains unmined and has an estimated resource of 37.4Mt at 7.5% Pb and 18g/t Ag. Mutton and McInerney (1987) and McInerney et al. (1994) described the geophysical expression of Abra, and recent geophysical survey results are presented here. Abra is characterised by discrete anomaly responses in magnetic, gravity and TDEM survey data. A +450nT magnetic anomaly is observed in ground and airborne magnetic data, which is caused by magnetite within the lower part of the stratabound zone. Dense galena, barite and iron oxide mineralisation in the stratabound zone, and galena in the feeder zone, is surrounded by low-density sedimentary host rock, resulting in a +1mGal gravity anomaly. TDEM surveys have resolved massive sulphide mineralisation as EM conductors, and petrophysical testing on core samples show this is mostly caused by galena. Inverted AMT-MT data sections resolved the deposit halo as a conductive anomaly. ZTEM data failed to resolve a distinct anomaly response. DDIP surveying failed to resolve a chargeable anomaly coincident to known high-grade mineralisation, despite significant disseminated sulphide mineralisation occurring within the deposit. An IP chargeability anomaly observed on the southern side of the deposit is thought to be associated with an alteration zone and low-grade disseminated sulphide mineralisation in a fault zone. A 2D seismic reflection survey line resolved the deposit envelope as strong seismic reflectors surrounded by a seismically bland zone, and this is related to the significant density contrast between the high-density stratabound mineralisation in contact with low-density sedimentary host rocks, as the mineralisation and host rock have similar seismic velocities. Passive seismic HVSR surveying resolved the top of Abra as a subtle HVSR response below a flat impedance contrast horizon interpreted as weathered siltstone over diagenetic cemented siltstone.","PeriodicalId":8502,"journal":{"name":"ASEG Extended Abstracts","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2019-12-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"2","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Update on the geophysical expression of the Abra sedimentary replacement Pb-Ag-Cu-Au deposit, Western Australia\",\"authors\":\"D. Stannard, J. Meyers, E. Turner, A. Scopel\",\"doi\":\"10.1080/22020586.2019.12073204\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Summary The Abra sedimentary replacement Pb-Ag-Cu-Au deposit is located in the Paleoproterozoic Edmund Basin, 900km NNE of Perth. Mineralisation at Abra has no surface expression and the deposit was discovered in 1981 by drill testing coincident magnetic and gravity anomaly highs. The deposit is hosted within siliciclastic and carbonate deposits of the Edmund Group and consists of a stratabound apron of lower grade Pb-Ag-Ba mineralisation in a laminated iron oxide and barite altered siltstone unit that overlies a funnel shaped feeder zone of chlorite altered, brecciated and veined carbonaceous siltstone containing high-grade Pb-Ag in the core, transitioning to Pb-Cu and Cu-Au at depth. As at December 2018, the Abra deposit remains unmined and has an estimated resource of 37.4Mt at 7.5% Pb and 18g/t Ag. Mutton and McInerney (1987) and McInerney et al. (1994) described the geophysical expression of Abra, and recent geophysical survey results are presented here. Abra is characterised by discrete anomaly responses in magnetic, gravity and TDEM survey data. A +450nT magnetic anomaly is observed in ground and airborne magnetic data, which is caused by magnetite within the lower part of the stratabound zone. Dense galena, barite and iron oxide mineralisation in the stratabound zone, and galena in the feeder zone, is surrounded by low-density sedimentary host rock, resulting in a +1mGal gravity anomaly. TDEM surveys have resolved massive sulphide mineralisation as EM conductors, and petrophysical testing on core samples show this is mostly caused by galena. Inverted AMT-MT data sections resolved the deposit halo as a conductive anomaly. ZTEM data failed to resolve a distinct anomaly response. DDIP surveying failed to resolve a chargeable anomaly coincident to known high-grade mineralisation, despite significant disseminated sulphide mineralisation occurring within the deposit. An IP chargeability anomaly observed on the southern side of the deposit is thought to be associated with an alteration zone and low-grade disseminated sulphide mineralisation in a fault zone. A 2D seismic reflection survey line resolved the deposit envelope as strong seismic reflectors surrounded by a seismically bland zone, and this is related to the significant density contrast between the high-density stratabound mineralisation in contact with low-density sedimentary host rocks, as the mineralisation and host rock have similar seismic velocities. Passive seismic HVSR surveying resolved the top of Abra as a subtle HVSR response below a flat impedance contrast horizon interpreted as weathered siltstone over diagenetic cemented siltstone.\",\"PeriodicalId\":8502,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"ASEG Extended Abstracts\",\"volume\":null,\"pages\":null},\"PeriodicalIF\":0.0000,\"publicationDate\":\"2019-12-01\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"\",\"citationCount\":\"2\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"ASEG Extended Abstracts\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"1085\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://doi.org/10.1080/22020586.2019.12073204\",\"RegionNum\":0,\"RegionCategory\":null,\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"\",\"JCRName\":\"\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"ASEG Extended Abstracts","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1080/22020586.2019.12073204","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 2
摘要
Abra沉积置换Pb-Ag-Cu-Au矿床位于珀斯东北偏北900km的古元古代埃德蒙盆地。Abra的矿化没有地表表现,矿床是1981年通过钻测发现的。该矿床赋有于埃德蒙群的硅质碎屑和碳酸盐矿床中,由层控带组成,在层状氧化铁和重晶石蚀变粉砂岩单元中有较低品位的铅银钡矿化,层控带覆盖在绿泥石蚀变、角化和脉状碳质粉砂岩的漏斗状给料带上,其中芯部含有高品位的铅银,向深部过渡为铅铜和铜金。截至2018年12月,Abra矿床仍未开采,估计资源量为3740万吨,铅含量为7.5%,银含量为18g/t。Mutton and McInerney(1987)和McInerney et al.(1994)描述了Abra的地球物理表达式,这里给出了最近的地球物理调查结果。Abra的特点是磁、重力和TDEM测量数据的离散异常响应。在地面和航空磁资料中观测到+450nT磁异常,这是由层控带下部的磁铁矿引起的。层控带中密集的方铅矿、重晶石和氧化铁矿化,以及给矿带中密集的方铅矿被低密度的沉积寄主岩包围,形成+1mGal的重力异常。TDEM调查已经解决了大量硫化物矿化作为电磁导体,岩心样品的岩石物理测试表明,这主要是由方铅矿引起的。倒置的AMT-MT数据剖面将沉积晕确定为导电异常。ZTEM数据未能解决一个明显的异常响应。DDIP测量未能解决与已知高品位矿化相一致的带电异常,尽管在矿床内发生了显著的浸染硫化物矿化。在矿床南侧观测到的激电性异常被认为与断裂带中的蚀变带和低品位浸染硫化物矿化有关。二维地震反射测量线将矿床包络层分解为被地震温和带包围的强地震反射带,这与高密度层控矿化与低密度沉积寄主岩接触之间的显著密度差异有关,因为矿化和寄主岩具有相似的地震速度。被动地震HVSR测量将Abra顶部解析为平坦阻抗对比层下方的微妙HVSR响应,解释为成岩胶结粉砂岩上的风化粉砂岩。
Update on the geophysical expression of the Abra sedimentary replacement Pb-Ag-Cu-Au deposit, Western Australia
Summary The Abra sedimentary replacement Pb-Ag-Cu-Au deposit is located in the Paleoproterozoic Edmund Basin, 900km NNE of Perth. Mineralisation at Abra has no surface expression and the deposit was discovered in 1981 by drill testing coincident magnetic and gravity anomaly highs. The deposit is hosted within siliciclastic and carbonate deposits of the Edmund Group and consists of a stratabound apron of lower grade Pb-Ag-Ba mineralisation in a laminated iron oxide and barite altered siltstone unit that overlies a funnel shaped feeder zone of chlorite altered, brecciated and veined carbonaceous siltstone containing high-grade Pb-Ag in the core, transitioning to Pb-Cu and Cu-Au at depth. As at December 2018, the Abra deposit remains unmined and has an estimated resource of 37.4Mt at 7.5% Pb and 18g/t Ag. Mutton and McInerney (1987) and McInerney et al. (1994) described the geophysical expression of Abra, and recent geophysical survey results are presented here. Abra is characterised by discrete anomaly responses in magnetic, gravity and TDEM survey data. A +450nT magnetic anomaly is observed in ground and airborne magnetic data, which is caused by magnetite within the lower part of the stratabound zone. Dense galena, barite and iron oxide mineralisation in the stratabound zone, and galena in the feeder zone, is surrounded by low-density sedimentary host rock, resulting in a +1mGal gravity anomaly. TDEM surveys have resolved massive sulphide mineralisation as EM conductors, and petrophysical testing on core samples show this is mostly caused by galena. Inverted AMT-MT data sections resolved the deposit halo as a conductive anomaly. ZTEM data failed to resolve a distinct anomaly response. DDIP surveying failed to resolve a chargeable anomaly coincident to known high-grade mineralisation, despite significant disseminated sulphide mineralisation occurring within the deposit. An IP chargeability anomaly observed on the southern side of the deposit is thought to be associated with an alteration zone and low-grade disseminated sulphide mineralisation in a fault zone. A 2D seismic reflection survey line resolved the deposit envelope as strong seismic reflectors surrounded by a seismically bland zone, and this is related to the significant density contrast between the high-density stratabound mineralisation in contact with low-density sedimentary host rocks, as the mineralisation and host rock have similar seismic velocities. Passive seismic HVSR surveying resolved the top of Abra as a subtle HVSR response below a flat impedance contrast horizon interpreted as weathered siltstone over diagenetic cemented siltstone.