Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
11033080 Ore Geology Reviews 2018 12 Pages PDF
Abstract
Examination of gold and gold-enriched pyrite from the Mississagi Formation conglomerates suggests that specific point sources existed for most of the gold therein. Each of the above basins forms part of a larger contiguous continental rift system prior to the breakup of the supercontinent Kenorland at around 2480 Ma. As each basin fill was displaced to different geographic positions following this continental breakup and then subjected to separate orogenic and metamorphic overprints, the gold and uranium mineralization in each of the basins is unlikely to be of a common, post-depositional hydrothermal origin, but in all likelihood of a paleoplacer origin. It is suggested that this period of gold-enrichment is the result of truncation and reworking of underlying stratigraphically older units and/or from former gold deposits/occurrences and gold-enriched greenstone-dominated hinterlands. The omnipresence of detrital and/or syn-depositional pyrite in conglomerates of each basin reinforces the idea that a lack of atmospheric oxygen at the time of Kenorland rifting existed during their deposition and prior to the “great oxidation event”. Our comparative analysis of Kenorland rift graben fills reveals that gold potential, which can be determined by the presence of detrital pyrite as observed at the Pardo project, should exist in all stratigraphic equivalents of the Mississagi and Matinenda formations where preferentially reworked fluvial conglomerates rest on an erosional unconformity and where a corresponding Au-enriched Archean hinterland existed.
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Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Economic Geology
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