区域构造和乡村-岩石相在确定爱达荷州中部矿产带中的作用,详细介绍了黄松矿区和雷山矿区

Karen Lund, John N. Aleinikoff, Christopher Holm-Denoma
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Thunder Mountain deposits farthest east are near-surface hot-springs deposits in Eocene volcanic and volcaniclastic rocks that overlie buried Cretaceous igneous and older roof pendant rocks.The mining district clusters are sited across several northwest-striking paleostratigraphic belts that are exposed in roof pendants and are offset by the regional normal fault system. A northeastern belt is Mesoproterozoic strata associated with gold-silver-copper±cobalt deposits. A central belt of Neoproterozoic rocks is not associated with mineral deposits in the central Idaho mineral province. A southwestern belt composed of probable Paleozoic deep-water miogeoclinal slope rocks and late Paleozoic epicratonic basinal rocks is thin and narrowly exposed but associated with gold-silver-antimony-tungsten±mercury deposits. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

欲了解更多信息,请联系:美国地质、地球物理和地球化学科学中心主任。科罗拉多州丹佛市邮站973号联系酒吧仓库爱达荷州中部的成矿省拥有众多的矿床类型。这些矿床包括晚白垩世贵重多金属脉状矿床、古新世-始新世角砾岩型岩浆型金钨锑矿床、变质沉积岩顶垂体和晚白垩世花岗岩中的始新世汞矿床。在爱达荷省中部始新世火山岩中也发现了温泉金矿床。新的高质量分辨率离子探针(SHRIMP)对火成岩和变质沉积岩碎屑锆石进行铀铅(U-Pb)年龄分析,并结合地质填图,阐明了矿床的地质格架。该框架包括:(1)构造对矿区区域分布的控制;(2)个别地区的渐进式构造发育;(3)区域沉积相及其对形成区域带的金属组合的控制;(4)若干区域岩浆事件的影响。在爱达荷州中部,15个矿区形成了两组200公里长的正断层系统。西北集群位于大型西侧下移断层以西的区域上盘,矿床位于切割区域上盘的较小断层和裂缝上。东南簇位于一条连接的东侧大断层以东的区域上盘,沿相关上盘断层发育并受其控制。在区域断裂系统的南部,黄松-雷山地区横跨一个近24公里宽、向东倾斜的正断层多米诺骨牌地壳块,暴露出晚白垩世西部5 - 10公里深的原始地壳深度,始新世东部的浅地表深度。西北地区的矿床以晚白垩世为主,与爱达荷岩基岩体有关,只有一个矿床与始新世的少量侵入有关;东南组大部分矿床形成于晚白垩世,但有不同的始新世叠印成矿活动表现。在南组南段黄松-雷山地区,上盘崩塌过程中出现了多个成矿脉冲,表现为:(1)早期矿床多次叠印,(2)矿床深度、年龄和构造特征逐渐东移。西黄松地区原深埋矿床为晚白垩世粘塑性中温脉,上覆古新世和始新世角砾岩型浅成热液矿床。中部黄松区矿床发育较早的深部脉系,但主要为古新世和始新世角砾岩型浅成热液矿床,产于晚白垩世深成岩和元古宙-古生代顶垂岩中。东部地区矿床为始新世顶垂温泉相关矿床。最东面的雷山矿床为始新世火山岩和火山碎屑岩中的近地表温泉矿床,其上覆有白垩纪隐伏火成岩和更古老的顶板垂岩。矿区群位于几个向西北走向的古地层带上,这些古地层带暴露在顶板垂坠中,并被区域正断层系统所抵消。东北带是与金银铜±钴矿床伴生的中元古代地层。在爱达荷矿省中部,新元古代岩石的中央带与矿床无关。西南带可能由古生代深水造地槽斜坡岩和晚古生代浅海盆岩组成,薄而窄出露,并伴有金银锑钨±汞矿床。这些变质沉积岩(及其金属组合)是区域矿物带的一部分,其中的金属赋存与特定的沉积相带及其白垩纪逆冲断层并置有关,并且这些特征与晚白垩世或始新世的火成岩接近。这些相带、逆冲板块、火成岩环境以及相关的区域矿物带的偏移、保存或侵蚀剥脱受区域正断层系统位移的意义和幅度的控制。
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Roles of regional structures and country-rock facies in defining mineral belts in central Idaho mineral province with detail for Yellow Pine and Thunder Mountain mining districts
First posted August 29, 2023 For additional information, contact: Center Director, Geology, Geophysics, and Geochemistry Science CenterU.S. Geological SurveyBox 25046, Mail Stop 973Denver, CO 80225Contact Pubs Warehouse The central Idaho metallogenic province hosts numerous mineral deposit types. These include Late Cretaceous precious-polymetallic vein deposits, amagmatic Paleocene–Eocene breccia-hosted gold-tungsten-antimony deposits, and Eocene mercury deposits in metasedimentary roof pendants and in Late Cretaceous granitoids. Hot-springs gold deposits in Eocene volcanic rocks are also included in the central Idaho province. New sensitive high mass-resolution ion microprobe (SHRIMP) uranium-lead (U-Pb) ages for igneous rocks and for detrital zircon analyses of metasedimentary rocks along with geologic mapping clarify the geologic framework of the mineral deposits. This framework includes (1) structural controls for regional distribution of mining districts, (2) progressive structural development of individual districts, (3) regional sedimentary facies and their control of metals associations resulting in regional belts, and (4) influences of the several regional magmatic events.In central Idaho, 15 mining districts form two clusters that are grouped about a 200-kilometer (km) long system of normal faults. The northwestern cluster is in the regional hanging wall west of large, west-side-down faults, and the mineral deposits are located along smaller faults and fractures that cut the regional hanging wall. The southeastern cluster is in the regional hanging wall east of a linked large east-side-down fault and along and controlled by related hanging wall faults. At the southern extent of the regional fault system, the Yellow Pine-Thunder Mountain districts span a nearly 24-km-wide, east-tilted crustal block of normal-fault dominoes, exposing original crustal depths from 5 to 10 km deep on the west in the Late Cretaceous to shallow-surface depths on the east in the Eocene.Ore deposition in the northwestern district cluster was primarily Late Cretaceous and related to Idaho batholith plutons with only a single deposit related to a small Eocene intrusion; in the southeastern cluster, most deposits were initiated in the Late Cretaceous but with varying manifestations of overprinted Eocene mineralization activity. In the Yellow Pine-Thunder Mountain districts at the southern extent of the southern cluster, several mineralizing pulses occurred during hanging-wall collapse, such that (1) early deposits were multiply overprinted and (2) deposit depths, ages, and structural characteristics change progressively eastward. Originally deep-seated western Yellow Pine district deposits are Late Cretaceous viscoplastic mesothermal veins overprinted by Paleocene and Eocene breccia-hosted epithermal deposits. Central Yellow Pine district deposits contain early deeper vein systems but are primarily Paleocene and Eocene breccia-hosted epithermal deposits in Late Cretaceous plutonic rocks and Proterozoic–Paleozoic roof pendant rocks. Eastern district deposits are Eocene hot-springs-related deposits in the roof pendant. Thunder Mountain deposits farthest east are near-surface hot-springs deposits in Eocene volcanic and volcaniclastic rocks that overlie buried Cretaceous igneous and older roof pendant rocks.The mining district clusters are sited across several northwest-striking paleostratigraphic belts that are exposed in roof pendants and are offset by the regional normal fault system. A northeastern belt is Mesoproterozoic strata associated with gold-silver-copper±cobalt deposits. A central belt of Neoproterozoic rocks is not associated with mineral deposits in the central Idaho mineral province. A southwestern belt composed of probable Paleozoic deep-water miogeoclinal slope rocks and late Paleozoic epicratonic basinal rocks is thin and narrowly exposed but associated with gold-silver-antimony-tungsten±mercury deposits. These metasedimentary rocks (and their metal associations) are parts of regional mineral belts in which metal endowments are related to particular sedimentary facies belts and their Cretaceous thrust-fault juxtaposition and where these features have proximity to Late Cretaceous or Eocene igneous rocks. Offset and preservation or erosional stripping of these facies belts, thrust plates, igneous settings, and the associated regional mineral belts were controlled by the sense and magnitude of displacements across the regional normal-fault system.
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