Alteration paragenesis and the timing of mineralised quartz veins at the world-class Geita Hill gold deposit, Geita Greenstone Belt, Tanzania
Journal Publication ResearchOnline@JCUAbstract
The world-class Geita Hill deposit is one of the largest gold deposits located within the Geita Greenstone Belt in NW Tanzania. The deposit is hosted within a complexly deformed sedimentary package dominated by ironstone and intruded by diorite dykes. The gold mineralisation is spatially associated with the Geita Hill Shear Zone which, is a NE-trending, moderately NW dipping deformation zone consisting of a network of discontinuous shear fractures that record early thrusting overprinted by later strike-slip and normal events. The regional metamorphic assemblage in the meta-sediments is characterised by biotite +chlorite + actinolite +K-feldspar + magnetite ± pyrrhotite ± pyrite indicating upper greenschist facies conditions. The gold-related alteration overprints the regional metamorphic assemblage, and is characterised by silicification and sulfidation fronts that generally extend out from the mineralised zone by no more than one meter. The alteration assemblage includes sub-vertical, mineralised quartz veins that trend approximately E-W. The mineralised quartz veins are accompanied by alteration halos of quartz +biotite+ K-feldspar +pyrite which overprints the peak metamorphic assemblage. Gold is closely associated with secondary pyrite and occurs as free gold and gold tellurides (sylvanite, calaverite and nagyagite). It occurs mainly as inclusions in pyrite and as invisible gold in pyrite but also as gold inclusions in biotite and along quartz grain boundaries. Two distinct textural styles of auriferous pyrite can be distinguished: inclusion rich subhedral pyrite, hosting invisible gold, and inclusion free euhedral pyrite, hosting visible gold grains. It is common for the inclusions rich pyrite to have thick rims of inclusion free pyrite. The mineralising alteration is overprinted by barren, multiphase quartz-carbonate, and carbonate-chlorite veins. This alteration is characterised by the assemblage calcite +siderite +chlorite ± quartz ± pyrite ± barite. Palaeostress analysis of mineralised shear fractures along the Geita Hill Shear Zone are indicative of sigma 1 being vertical and sigma 3 trending N-S, indicating N-S extension, which is consistent with the orientation of the mineralised quartz veins.
Journal
Ore Geology Reviews
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Volume
91
ISBN/ISSN
1872-7360
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Pages Count
15
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Publisher
Elsevier
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DOI
10.1016/j.oregeorev.2017.08.023