Abstract:
The Paleoproterozoic Nonacho Basin, Northwest Territories, Canada, contains a variety of poorly characterized mineral deposits, including hydrothermal Cu-Ag-(Pb-Zn)
mineralization with one of the most representative examples at Salkeld Lake. The
mineralization occurs in breccias, veins and disseminations within fracture networks and
shear zones, cross-cutting granitic gneiss, metasedimentary rocks and alkali granitoids.
Utilizing a variety of bulk and microanalytical methods, this study provides the first genetic
constraints for, and a classification of, the mineralization at Salkeld Lake.
The results of fluid inclusion and stable O isotope analyses of quartz and calcite
suggest mixing, dilution and oxidation of a carbonic-aqueous mineralizing fluid by the
introduction of cooler meteoric water, which led to metal precipitation. End-stage
mineralizing conditions were at near surface P and T ~150-180 oC. The Cu-Ag-(Pb-Zn)
mineralization formed at ~1831 ± 2 Ma (laser Ar-Ar of pre- to syn-mineralization
muscovite) and is classified as an intrusion-related, sediment-hosted vein- and breccia related Cu-Ag-(Pb-Zn) deposit. Possible heat and metal sources are the calc-alkalic mafic
Sparrow Dykes or related magmatic events, timed with the waning stages of Trans Hudson Orogen (~2.0-1.8 Ga).
Description:
1 online resource (189 pages) : illustrations (chiefly colour), colour maps, charts, graphs
Includes abstract and appendices.
Includes bibliographical references (pages 135-163).