Abstract

Abstract This paper emphasizes the development of mineral deposit models for exploration using as a case study the sediment-hosted, structure-controlled, disseminated gold deposits in the Great Basin of the Western United States. More than 60 deposits have been found in this area since the discovery of the Carlin deposit in 1962. Most deposits were discovered by direct prospecting and sampling of outcropping silicified zones (jasperoids). Similar poorly exposed and unexposed deposits remain to be discovered, but future exploration will require improved models that indirectly predict locations of these deposits. Many of these sediment-hosted gold deposits occur within silicified and structurally complex zones in calcareous rocks below regional east-directed thrusts. Geological characteristics that have been successfully employed in exploration include: erosional windows (fensters) through the thrusts; silty to arenaceous calcareous host rocks below the thrusts; silicified zones; anticlines and domes of the lower plate calcareous sediments; alignment of deposits along linear trends; and geochemical anomalies (Au, Ag, As, Sb, Tl, etc.). Although the use of these criteria will discover new deposits, exploration now requires additional criteria that are reliably, but not so directly, associated with the deposits. Identification of these criteria will require the development of genetic models that tie more regional geological characteristics to ore formation and localization. Development of successful mineral deposit models first requires a working definition of the sediment-hosted gold deposit class and its geological characteristics. The characteristics of each deposit included in this class are then documented and validated. Next, the geological processes most likely responsible for the shared characteristics are identified. Finally, the most reliable, informative and accessible criteria, reflective of each ore-forming process, are selected. From these criteria are chosen the most efficient and effective geological features for continued exploration. Processes currently suggested to be important in the formation of sediment-hosted gold deposits include: regional wrench fault tectonics; plutonism; hydrothermal fluid flow driven by intrusions and/or thrusting; fluid flow along regional unconformities; gold precipitation following carbonate dissolution, or fluid mixing; and dissolution of synsedimentary gold from the allochthonous western assemblage sediments and reprecipitation of that gold in the deposits. A general approach for identifying additional possible processes, testing alternative processes and finally selecting exploration criteria is presented.

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