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The largest Au deposits in the St Ives Goldfield (Yilgarn Craton, Western Australia) may be located in a major Neoarchean volcano-sedimentary depo-centre
Authors:K L McGoldrick  R J Squire  R A F Cas  M Briggs  J Tunjic  C M Allen  I H Campbell  P C Hayman
Institution:1. School of Geosciences, Monash University, Clayton, VIC, 3168, Australia
4. Deutsche Bank, Level 23, 333 Collins St, Melbourne, VIC, 3000, Australia
2. St Ives Gold Mining Company, Gold Fields Australia, P.O. Box 359, Kambalda, WA, 6442, Australia
3. Research School of Earth Sciences, The Australian National University, Canberra, ACT, 2010, Australia
Abstract:The largest Neoarchean gold deposits in the world-class St Ives Goldfield, Western Australia, occur in an area known as the Argo–Junction region (e.g. Junction, Argo and Athena). Why this region is so well endowed with large deposits compared with other parts of the St Ives Goldfield is currently unclear, because gold deposits at St Ives are hosted by a variety of lithologic units and were formed during at least three different deformational events. This paper presents an investigation into the stratigraphic architecture and evolution of the Argo–Junction region to assess its implications for gold metallogenesis. The results show that the region’s stratigraphy may be subdivided into five regionally correlatable packages: mafic lavas of the Paringa Basalt; contemporaneously resedimented feldspar-rich pyroclastic debris of the Early Black Flag Group; coarse polymictic volcanic debris of the Late Black Flag Group; thick piles of mafic lavas and sub-volcanic sills of the Athena Basalt and Condenser Dolerite; and the voluminous quartz-rich sedimentary successions of the Early Merougil Group. In the Argo–Junction region, these units have an interpreted maximum thickness of at least 7,130 m, and thus represent an unusually thick accumulation of the Neoarchean volcano-sedimentary successions. It is postulated that major basin-forming structures that were active during deposition and emplacement of the voluminous successions later acted as important conduits during mineralisation. Therefore, a correlation exists between the location of the largest gold deposits in the St Ives Goldfield and the thickest parts of the stratigraphy. Recognition of this association has important implications for camp-scale exploration.
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