Orogenic gold in the Blue Mountains, eastern Oregon, USA

被引:1
作者
Lutz, Brandon M. [1 ]
机构
[1] Denver Fed Ctr, United States Geol Survey, Geosci & Environm Change Sci Ctr, Denver, CO 80225 USA
关键词
Orogenic gold; Accretionary prism; Oblique convergence; Dilatant zone; Blue Mountains; Oregon; NORTH-AMERICAN CORDILLERA; QUARTZ VEIN SYSTEMS; RIVER SUTURE ZONE; SIERRA-NEVADA; TERRANE ACCRETION; FORMING FLUIDS; NORTHEASTERN OREGON; TECTONIC EVOLUTION; STABLE-ISOTOPE; DEPOSITS;
D O I
10.1016/j.oregeorev.2023.105310
中图分类号
P5 [地质学];
学科分类号
0709 ; 081803 ;
摘要
At least 75% of gold produced in the State of Oregon came from the Blue Mountains. Most gold within the Blue Mountains was mined from orogenic gold veins and associated placer deposits. However, the geodynamic, regional, and deposit scale controls on orogenic gold mineralization within the Blue Mountains are not under-stood. Here, the mobilization, transport, deposition, and exposure of golds are linked to protracted tectonism of the western North American Cordillera through a scale-integrated mineral system. Gold production by mine (t) was estimated from public domain documents of production value (USD) and production time period (years). Lode endowment was then analyzed against criteria such as host rocks, vein structure, and location within the regional tectonic framework. Argillite, schist, and slate formed in accretionary wedge and fore-arc basins host the majority (-60%;-29 t) of the total recorded gold production. Unique geochemical, geomechanical, and hy-drological properties made these rock types excellent hosts. These properties were predetermined by both depositional setting (deep ocean basin) and metamorphic conditions (lower greenschist facies). Nearly half (50-55 %;-25.5 t) of recorded lode gold production was mined from lodes striking 030 degrees +/- 15 degrees azimuth. A reconstructed paleo-stress field supports that these were left lateral faults. It is speculated that these were part of a margin-parallel shear zone that partitioned the strike slip component of oblique convergence between sub-ducting oceanic plates and associated magmatic arcs. At both the district and the deposit scales, minor deviations in vein strike form local high-grade sites (i.e., dilatant zones). Such dilatant zones within major crustal shear zones could also explain the spatial, but not fluid-genetic association of granitic plutons with lode gold. The intersection lines between the veins, host rock fabrics, and secondary veins likely control the locations, thick-nesses, and pitch of high-grade ore shoots.
引用
收藏
页数:26
相关论文
共 50 条
[41]   Orogenic lode-gold deposits and listvenization processes in the El-Barramiya area, Eastern Desert, Egypt [J].
Mohamed Abdelrady ;
Hany Elhadek ;
Mohamed Abdelmoneim ;
Ahmed Saleh .
Environmental Earth Sciences, 2023, 82
[42]   Signatures of overprinting mineralisation processes in the orogenic gold deposit of the Pampalo mine, Hattu schist belt, eastern Finland [J].
Molnar, Ferenc ;
O'Brien, Hugh ;
Lahaye, Yann ;
Kapyaho, Asko ;
Sakellaris, Grigorios .
MINERAL DEPOSIT RESEARCH FOR A HIGH-TECH WORLD, VOLS. 1-4, 2013, :1160-+
[43]   Tellurium, magmatic fluids and orogenic gold: An early magmatic fluid pulse at Cononish gold deposit, Scotland [J].
Spence-Jones, Carl P. ;
Jenkin, Gawen R. T. ;
Boyce, Adrian J. ;
Hill, Nyree J. ;
Sangster, Christopher J. S. .
ORE GEOLOGY REVIEWS, 2018, 102 :894-905
[44]   Mossman orogenic gold province in north Queensland, Australia: regional metallogenic controls and undiscovered gold endowment [J].
Lisitsin, Vladimir A. ;
Dhnaram, Courteney ;
Donchak, Paul ;
Greenwood, Matthew .
MINERALIUM DEPOSITA, 2014, 49 (03) :313-333
[45]   New constraints on fluid sources in orogenic gold deposits, Victoria, Australia [J].
Fu, Bin ;
Kendrick, Mark A. ;
Fairmaid, Alison M. ;
Phillips, David ;
Wilson, Christopher J. L. ;
Mernagh, Terrence P. .
CONTRIBUTIONS TO MINERALOGY AND PETROLOGY, 2012, 163 (03) :427-447
[46]   Environmental contaminants in great blue herons (Ardea herodias) from the lower Columbia and Willamette rivers, Oregon and Washington, USA [J].
Thomas, CM ;
Anthony, RG .
ENVIRONMENTAL TOXICOLOGY AND CHEMISTRY, 1999, 18 (12) :2804-2816
[47]   Orogenic gold: Common or evolving fluid and metal sources through time [J].
Goldfarb, Richard J. ;
Groves, David I. .
LITHOS, 2015, 233 :2-26
[48]   Fluid and metal sources in the Faboliden hypozonal orogenic gold deposit, Sweden [J].
Bark, Glenn ;
Boyce, Adrian J. ;
Fallick, Anthony E. ;
Weihed, Par .
MINERALIUM DEPOSITA, 2021, 56 (03) :425-440
[49]   The Mustajarvi orogenic gold occurrence, Central Lapland Greenstone Belt, Finland: a telluride-dominant mineral system [J].
Mueller, Matthias ;
Peltonen, Petri ;
Eilu, Pasi ;
Goldfarb, Richard ;
Hanski, Eero .
MINERALIUM DEPOSITA, 2020, 55 (08) :1625-1646
[50]   An orocline in the eastern Central Asian Orogenic Belt [J].
Liu, Yongjiang ;
Li, Weimin ;
Ma, Yongfei ;
Feng, Zhiqiang ;
Guan, Qingbin ;
Li, Sanzhong ;
Chen, Zhaoxu ;
Liang, Chenyue ;
Wen, Quanbo .
EARTH-SCIENCE REVIEWS, 2021, 221