Abstract

Lebong Tandai is a low-sulphidation, volcanic-hosted epithermal gold deposit of Neogene age, located within the foothills of the Barisan Mountains, Sumatra. To date, the mine has produced approximately 40 tonnes of gold and 400 tonnes of silver. The mineralisation is exclusively in the form of tabular quartz-cemented breccias bodies which are localised along faults. The breccias comprise angular to sub-rounded clasts of the wallrocks and earlier barren breccias cemented by banded or massive quartz, and in many instances, the clasts are supported within the quartz cement. The sulphide minerals occur as either a single cockade band around the clasts in the breccia, or as polymineralic aggregates disseminated throughout the breccia cement. The main precious-metal-bearing phase is electrum, with silver-sulphosalts and silver-tellurides also present. Highly variable concentrations of pyrite, sphalerite, galena and chalcopyrite are associated with the precious-metal phases. With the exception of two minor lodes, the mineralised breccias are localised along strike-slip faults which display changes in orientation indicative of D-, R- and P-shears and T-fractures, with individual segments ranging from a few metres to a few hundred metres in length. Two strike-slip fault systems are recognised, one sinistral, trending east-west and the other dextral, trending northwest, the latter of which is parallel to the Sumatran Fault System. The majority of gold and silver production is from breccias localised along faults formed during the sinistral tectonism. The breccias are believed to have been generated during compressional reactivation of the east-west sinistral strike-slip faults in response to the subduction of the Indian-Australian plate beneath Sumatra. Supralithostatic fluid pressures are a necessary pre-requisite for such reactivation, and the sudden drop in fluid pressure during reactivation is thought to have resulted in both the formation of the breccias by hydraulic fracturing, and the deposition of amorphous silica, precious metals and base metal sulphides. High rates of fluid flow subsequent to fracturing are thought to have led to fluidisation of the breccia clasts and abrasion to their current morphologies. Microthermometry of fluid inclusions in sphalerite indicates that the mineralising fluids were of low salinity, less than 3 wt% NaCl equivalent, and that mineralisation took place at temperatures of 260–280°C. Variations of salinity and homogenisation temperature due to boiling are poorly developed, although if boiling occurred, the metalliferous minerals would have been deposited early in the boiling process before the fluid had cooled appreciably.

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