4.6 Article

Geology of the Archean Intrusion-Hosted La-Grande-Sud Au-Cu Prospect, La Grande Subprovince, James Bay Region, Quebec

Journal

ECONOMIC GEOLOGY
Volume 107, Issue 5, Pages 935-962

Publisher

SOC ECONOMIC GEOLOGISTS, INC
DOI: 10.2113/econgeo.107.5.935

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. Virginia Mines
  2. Ministere des Ressources naturelles et de la Faune (MRNF)
  3. Centre d'Etudes stir les Ressources minerales (GERM) at the Universite du Quebec a Chicoutimi (UQAC)
  4. Services Techniques Geonordic

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The Archean La Grande and Eastmain domains of the La Grande subprovince in the James Bay region of northwestern Quebec are the focus of renewed and extensive exploration as a result of recent major discoveries made in this region (e.g., similar to 8 Moz Au Roberto deposit). A number of significant Neoarchean Au base metal occurrences are present in the La Grande domain, including the La-Grande-Sud Au-Cu prospect (Zone 32, inferred resource of 4.2 million metric tons (Mt) at 2.1 g/t An and 0.2 wt % Cu). The La-Grande-Sud Au-Cu prospect is hosted in the 2734 +/- 2 Ma synvolcanic La-Grande-Sud Tonalite in the 2751 to 2732 Ma Yasinski Group volcanic rocks. The La-Grande-Sud Tonalite is a synvolcanic calc-alkaline intrusion emplaced in an arc-like tectonomagmatic setting. Timing relationships in mineralized zones as well as associated hydrothermal alteration zones support a pre- to early-D-1 origin for at least a part of the mineralization in the La-Grande-Sud Tonalite. Deformation events were responsible for the overprinting of the early mineralization by auriferous shear zone-related systems associated with D-2. Evidence for a pre-D-2 and pre- to early-D-1 alteration and mineralization system includes: (1) a broadly concentric pattern defined by the hydrothermal alteration assemblages within the La-Grande-Sud Tonalite, which suggests that the hydrothermal alteration was, at least in part, controlled by the geometry of the intrusion rather than by the D-2 deformation; (2) the development of a weak biotite-bearing potassic assemblage (biotite-epidote-plagioclase-muscovite-calcite +/- pyrite) that is gradually replaced outward from the center of the intrusion by a chlorite-bearing propylitic assemblage (chlorite-epidote-muscovite-plagioclase-calcite-pyrite), and locally overprinted by a sericitic alteration assemblage (muscovite-quartz-albite-chlorite-pyrite-carbonate), which represents the most intense alteration in the La-Grande-Sud Tonalite; (3) the presence of mineralized hydrothermal breccias along the margins of the intrusion; (4) deformed disseminated and stockwork-style Au-Cu sulfide mineralization consisting of pyrite, chalcopyrite, tennantite, arsenopyrite, pyrrhotite, Bi sulfosalts, and native Au +/- Bi in the sericite, chlorite, and biotite facies alteration zones; (5) S-1-parallel elongated tonalite clasts and sulfide veinlets in D-2-folded and transposed hydrothermal biotite breccias; and (6) pyrite porphyroblasts that are elongated parallel to the Si fabric (syn-D-1 metamorphic recrystallization) and that were folded during D-2. D-2 was associated with the development of conjugate auriferous extensional quartz-tourmaline veins (orogenic-style veins) that were superimposed on the pre- to early-D-1 intrusion-hosted mineralized system. Gold in these syn- to late-D-2 veins could have been reinobilized from preexisting mineralization (disseminated sulfides) or was related to a late (syn-D-2) auriferous hydrothermal event. The intrusion-hosted Au mineralization of the Ea-Grande-Sud An-Cu prospect illustrates that Archean synvolcanic intrusions, regardless of their size, can host a range of styles of alteration and mineralization, including both early and late mineralizing systems.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available