Abstract

Systematic exploration has delineated significant gold mineralization in the River Reef Zone and the presence of a siliceous body at Watuputih Hill, which is a Poboya gold prospect in Central Sulawesi, Indonesia. The mineralization is hosted within the Palu Metamorphic Complex. The host rocks consist of granite, biotite gneiss, and biotite schist, which is intercalated by feldspar porphyroblastic biotite schist and amphibolitic schist. The X-ray fluorescence (XRF) analysis of the granite and biotite gneiss suggests that the granitic rocks can be characterized as magnesian arc calc-alkaline rocks, with a weakly peraluminous composition. Alteration minerals were analyzed by a combination of petrographic and X-ray diffraction (XRD). In the River Reef Zone, the hydrothermal alteration zones can be sorted by their proximity to the primary fluid conduit and divided into inner, high-T, and low-T propylitic zones. In Watuputih Hill, the hydrothermal alteration can be divided into advanced argillic and argillic zones. The hydrothermal alteration assemblages indicated that the fluid was at a near-neutral pH in the River Reef Zone, whereas the fluid was acidic within Watuputih Hill. Because the hill is relatively distant from the River Reef Zone, the presence of these zones at Watuputih Hill may be indicative of another mineralization system beneath the hill.

Highlights

  • The Poboya gold prospect is located approximately 12 km to the northeast of Palu City

  • We present our work related to the host rocks and hydrothermal alteration occurring in the River Reef Zone (RRZ) and Watuputih Hill (WPH)

  • The schist unit is dominated by biotite schist, which is intercalated by feldspar porphyroblastic biotite schist and amphibolitic schist

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Summary

Introduction

The Poboya gold prospect is located approximately 12 km to the northeast of Palu City Gold mineralization at this prospect is outlined by three vein zones, namely the River Reef Zone (RRZ), the. Wajdi et al [2] have documented that quartz-carbonate veins cutting through host rocks in RRZ exhibit several textures that are characteristic of low-sulfidation epithermal deposits. These textures include colloform-crustiform banding, bladed calcite, massive chalcedony, and comb banded quartz. The area from Palu to the neck of Sulawesi is built on the Palu Metamorphic Complex (PMC) basement rocks. Several higher-grade metamorphic rocks occur in this complex, such as granulite, eclogite, and garnet peridotite [14]. This metamorphic complex is derived from Permo-Triassic metagranitoids and metasediments of Australia-New Guinea, metabasites of mid-ocean ridge basalts affinity, and Sundaland-origin rocks [15]

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