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Timing of Fracture Formation and Duration of Mineralization at the Hishikari Deposit, Southern Kyushu, Japan
Authors:Ryota Sekine    Eiji Izawa   Koichiro Watanabe
Affiliation:Mineral Resources Division, Sumitomo Metal Mining Co., Ltd., 5–11–3 Shimbashi, Minato-ku, Tokyo 105–8716, Japan [e-mail: ];Department of Earth Resources Engineering, Kyushu University, 6–10–1 Hakozaki, Fukuoka 812–8581, Japan
Abstract:Abstract. The Hishikari epithermal gold deposit consists of the Honko-Sanjin zone and Yamada zone. On the basis of observed crosscutting relationships of veins, vein system in the Hishikari deposit was classified into the early and late veins. They differ from orientation, width, control by unconformity, the amount of displacement and structural features, but have similarity in gold grade and Au/Ag ratios. K-Ar ages are presented for the classified veins to clarify timing of fracturing and duration of mineralization.
Age determination revealed that the early veins in the Honko-Sanjin zone range from 0.86 to 1.11 Ma and that the late veins range from 0.73 to 0. 84 Ma. The economically most important mineralization in the Hishikari deposit occurred around 0.90 Ma in a very short period (about 0.05 million years).
The distribution of mineralization age in the whole Hishikari deposit, occurrences of slickensides and ground water temperatures imply that mineralization lasted longer in the southern part of the deposit. As compared the early veins with late veins, structural changes including width, strike, dip and vein characteristics occurred at around 0.85 Ma.
Keywords:crosscutting relationship    fracture formation    K-Ar age    duration of mineralization    Hishikari gold deposit    Pleistocene    southern Kyushu
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