Abstract
Gold placers are formed as a result of surficial processes but glacial and fluvioglacial systems are generally considered to be unfavourable for placer genesis. Nevertheless, some important glacial and fluvioglacial placers have been discovered and are currently being exploited in the Andes of Peru and Bolivia. In the Plio-Pleistocene Ananea-Ancocala basin (4300–4900 m above sea-level), the gold content of the various formations indicates that only glacial and fluvioglacial sediments related to the Ancocala and Chaquiminas Glaciations (middle and upper Pleistocene) contain gold in any notable quantity. Local concentrations of economic interest occur only where a glacier has cut through a primary mineralized zone. Glacial erosion of dispersed primary mineralizations does not produce high-content placers of the kind found in fluviatile environments. Gold distribution in tills is more irregular than in fluviatile sediments and no marked enrichment at bedrock occurs. The transition from a glacial to a fluvioglacial environment is characterized by an increase in gold content due to a relative concentration of the biggest gold flakes and by the appearance of a gold distribution pattern similar to that found in a fluviatile environment. During their transport by glacial and fluvioglacial processes, gold particles acquire specific features; the size and morphology of a gold flake population are determined by the sedimentological and geomorphological environment in which the flakes are carried.
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