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Geology, alteration, mineralization and metal zonation of the Mt. Milligan porphyry copper-gold deposits Delong, R. Campbell
Abstract
The Mt. Milligan porphyry copper-gold deposits are in central British Columbia, 155 km northwest of Prince George. They were discovered in 1987 after extensive soil and lithogeochemical sampling, geological mapping, ground and airborne geophysical surveys, trenching and diamond drilling. An indicated resource of 299 million tonnes grading 0.45 g/t Au and 0.22% Cu has been delineated in two deposits: Mt. Milligan Main, which includes the 66 zone, and the Southern Star. The Mt. Milligan deposits are hosted by porphyritic monzonite stocks and adjacent volcanic rocks of the Witch Lake formation of the Takla Group. All are within the Early Mesozoic Quesnel Terrane. Potassic and propylitic alteration characterize the Mt. Milligan deposits. Potassic alteration is most intensely developed around the contacts of the MBX and Southern Star stocks. An inner biotite subzone is spatially related to the core of copper-gold mineralization. Propylitic alteration occurs peripheral to, and locally superimposed on, the outer borders of the potassic alteration. Central parts of most of the deposits are: (i) gold and copper rich, (ii) mineralized with chalcopyrite, and minor bornite and pyrite, and (iii) associated with potassic alteration. Peripheral mineralization, including the gold rich but copper poor 66 zone, is marked by minor lead-zinc-silver mineralization (mainly in sparse veins) associated with propylitic alteration. Higher gold concentrations in the 66 zone can be accounted for by overprinting of two periods of gold deposition from AuCl⁻¹ and Au(HS)₂⁻ bearing solutions. Other characteristics consistent with this two stage model of gold deposition are: (1) two populations of gold, one correlating with copper (gold transport as AuCl⁻¹ similar to the higher temperature copper chloride complexes), and one independent of copper (transport as Au(HS) ₂⁻), (2) two periods of alteration: (i) potassic (consistent with gold being transported as AuCl⁻¹), and (ii) a propylitic retrograde overprint of an assemblage of epidote-pyrite associated with alteration of biotite to chlorite, and (3) elevated zinc, lead and silver concentrations, indicative of lower temperature solutions that would favour gold transport as Au(HS) ₂⁻.
Item Metadata
Title |
Geology, alteration, mineralization and metal zonation of the Mt. Milligan porphyry copper-gold deposits
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Creator | |
Publisher |
University of British Columbia
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Date Issued |
1996
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Description |
The Mt. Milligan porphyry copper-gold deposits are in central British Columbia,
155 km northwest of Prince George. They were discovered in 1987 after
extensive soil and lithogeochemical sampling, geological mapping, ground and
airborne geophysical surveys, trenching and diamond drilling. An indicated
resource of 299 million tonnes grading 0.45 g/t Au and 0.22% Cu has been
delineated in two deposits: Mt. Milligan Main, which includes the 66 zone, and
the Southern Star.
The Mt. Milligan deposits are hosted by porphyritic monzonite stocks and
adjacent volcanic rocks of the Witch Lake formation of the Takla Group. All are
within the Early Mesozoic Quesnel Terrane.
Potassic and propylitic alteration characterize the Mt. Milligan deposits. Potassic
alteration is most intensely developed around the contacts of the MBX and
Southern Star stocks. An inner biotite subzone is spatially related to the core of
copper-gold mineralization. Propylitic alteration occurs peripheral to, and locally
superimposed on, the outer borders of the potassic alteration.
Central parts of most of the deposits are: (i) gold and copper rich, (ii)
mineralized with chalcopyrite, and minor bornite and pyrite, and (iii) associated
with potassic alteration. Peripheral mineralization, including the gold rich but
copper poor 66 zone, is marked by minor lead-zinc-silver mineralization (mainly
in sparse veins) associated with propylitic alteration.
Higher gold concentrations in the 66 zone can be accounted for by overprinting
of two periods of gold deposition from AuCl⁻¹ and Au(HS)₂⁻ bearing solutions.
Other characteristics consistent with this two stage model of gold deposition are:
(1) two populations of gold, one correlating with copper (gold transport as
AuCl⁻¹ similar to the higher temperature copper chloride complexes), and
one independent of copper (transport as Au(HS) ₂⁻),
(2) two periods of alteration: (i) potassic (consistent with gold being transported
as AuCl⁻¹), and (ii) a propylitic retrograde overprint of an assemblage of
epidote-pyrite associated with alteration of biotite to chlorite, and
(3) elevated zinc, lead and silver concentrations, indicative of lower temperature
solutions that would favour gold transport as Au(HS) ₂⁻.
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Extent |
11933813 bytes
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Genre | |
Type | |
File Format |
application/pdf
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Language |
eng
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Date Available |
2009-02-12
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Provider |
Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library
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Rights |
For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use.
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DOI |
10.14288/1.0052726
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URI | |
Degree | |
Program | |
Affiliation | |
Degree Grantor |
University of British Columbia
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Graduation Date |
1996-11
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Campus | |
Scholarly Level |
Graduate
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Aggregated Source Repository |
DSpace
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Item Media
Item Citations and Data
Rights
For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use.