David C. M. Fox, S. Spinks, M. Pearce, M. Vaillant, R. Thorne, M. Barham, M. Aspandiar
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引用次数: 0
摘要
卡洛城堡是位于西澳大利亚皮尔巴拉克拉通西部的一个铜钴金矿床。虽然卡洛城堡是皮尔巴拉地区发现的最古老的铜矿床,最初发现于1882年,但从未对矿石成矿进行过详细的研究。在被遗弃了很长一段时间之后,最近的一次钻探活动发现了一个具有经济意义和地质复杂的Cu-Co-Au矿化系统,目前Carlow Castle的资源估计为770万吨,Au 1.06g/t, Cu 0.51%, Co 0.08%,使其成为澳大利亚最重要的Cu-Co-Au矿床之一。利用各种地球化学和矿物学技术对这种矿化进行了分析,以便对其成因提供第一个约束。这一分析表明,Carlow Castle是一个热液型Cu-Co-Au矿床,其矿化分布在太古宙基性火山-沉积序列中遍布绿泥化剪切带的富含硫化物的石英脉中。在这些矿脉中,硫化物矿物学以黄铁矿(FeS2)、黄铜矿(CuFeS2)、辉铜矿(Cu2S)和钴矿(CoAsS)为主。在这里,我们提出了对Carlow Castle的Cu-Co-Au矿化性质的首次详细研究结果,并提出了这个独特矿床成因的造山模型。认为卡洛城堡的形成与太古宙皮尔巴拉克拉通的初始组合有关。
The genesis of Carlow Castle: A unique Australian orogenic Cu-Co-Au deposit in the Archean Pilbara Craton
Summary Carlow Castle is a Cu-Co-Au deposit situated within the western Pilbara Craton of Western Australia. Whilst Carlow Castle is the oldest discovered copper deposit in the Pilbara region, having been initially discovered in 1882, no detailed study of the ore mineralisation has ever been undertaken. After being long abandoned, a recent drilling campaign through 2018 uncovered an economically significant and geologically complex system of Cu-Co-Au mineralisation with a current resource estimate for Carlow Castle of 7.7Mt @ 1.06g/t Au, 0.51% Cu, and 0.08% Co, making it one of Australia’s most significant Cu-Co-Au deposits. This mineralisation was analysed using a variety of geochemical and mineralogical techniques in order to provide the first constraint on its genesis. This analysis suggests that Carlow Castle is a hydrothermal Cu-Co-Au deposit, with mineralisation hosted in sulphide-rich quartz veins throughout a pervasively chloritised shear zone in an Archaean mafic volcano-sedimentary sequence. Within these ore veins, the sulphide mineralogy is dominated by pyrite (FeS2), chalcopyrite (CuFeS2), chalcocite (Cu2S), and cobaltite (CoAsS). Here we present the findings of the first detailed study on the nature of the Cu-Co-Au mineralisation at Carlow Castle and propose an orogenic model for the genesis of this unique deposit. It is proposed that the orogenic event that gave rise to Carlow Castle is related to the initial assembly of the Pilbara Craton during the Archean.