An evaluation of genetic models for gold deposits of the Bousquet District, Quebec, based on their mineralogic, geochemical, and structural characteristics

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pascal Marquis Claude Hubert Alex C. Brown D. M. Rigg
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
17
File Size:
2406 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1990

Abstract

"Numerous studies of the Bousquet mining district, Abitibi, Quebec, mainly following the successive discoveries of new gold deposits over the past two decades, have led to a broad range of genetic hypotheses for their gold deposition. A compilation of petrographic, structural, and geochemical data indicates that the gold deposits are composed chiefly of pyritic schists derived from felsic and mafic volcanic and volcaniclastic protoliths, and of auriferous massive pyrite hosted by pyritic schists of felsic affinity. The deposits are typically located within zones of local pyrite enrichment and advanced-argillic alteration which are in turn enclosed within much larger zones of disseminated pyrite included in regional-scale, commonly anastomosing, zones of sericitic alteration.Overprinting relationships between three sets of folds and foliations indicate that the host-rocks of the gold deposits have retained the imprint of three successive generations of ductile deformation resulting from regional dynamothermal metamorphism. Sericitic and advanced-argillic alteration, together with massive sulphide deposition, are interpreted to have taken place prior to the onset of the ductile deformation, based on observations 1) of altered fragments of wallrocks which are enclosed within massive sulphide bodies and were thus preserved through regional metamorphism, 2) of the syntectonic deformed pyrite, and3) of the syn-tectonic porphyroblasts of andalusite, garnet and plagioclase. The orebodies are oblate to prolate, and the pyrite-gold mineralization is typically vein-type, distributed in foliation-oblique and foliation-parallel veins. The gold-bearing structures postdate all foliations, and are associated with retrograde alteration assemblages that are pseudomorphic after pea~-metamorphic porphyroblasts in host-rocks, and with cataclasticfabrics that overprint syn-metamorphic pressure-solution features and annealing fabrics in pyrite.Retrograde gold-bearing assemblages indicate a chemical disequilibrium between the ore-forming fluids and their host rocks. This disequilibrium rules out the possibility that gold was remobilized from its own host, and suggests, instead, that the ore-forming fluids and their metal contents had an allochtonous source. Stable and radiogenic isotope analyses indicate that the fluids had a metamorphic origin, and that the associated alteration took place after the culmination of the Kenoran orogeny."
Citation

APA: Pascal Marquis Claude Hubert Alex C. Brown D. M. Rigg  (1990)  An evaluation of genetic models for gold deposits of the Bousquet District, Quebec, based on their mineralogic, geochemical, and structural characteristics

MLA: Pascal Marquis Claude Hubert Alex C. Brown D. M. Rigg An evaluation of genetic models for gold deposits of the Bousquet District, Quebec, based on their mineralogic, geochemical, and structural characteristics. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1990.

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