Porphyry-related mineral districts can host many major ore deposits of diverse styles and metal associations, including porphyry, epithermal and skarn deposits. In these deposits, hydrothermal alteration is typically zoned, and alteration zoning has long been an important tool used in their exploration (Fig. 1). However, the various mineral assemblages and textures that characterize each alteration zone are also present within barren hydrothermal systems, and in some cases may also be produced by non-mineralizing processes such as regional metamorphism. Discriminating mineralized and barren systems, being able to locate well-mineralized hydrothermal centers, and recognizing the distal footprints of mineralization continue to be great challenges to explorers. In this abstract, we demonstrate how the combination of epidote and chlorite chemistry can be used to successfully detect the location of a porphyry deposit, using the Resolution porphyry Cu-Mo deposit as a case study. The results presented in this paper are derived from a blind site test submitted to AMIRA International project P765A by Rio Tinto Exploration (RTX).
Funding
AMIRA International Ltd
Lakehead University
History
Publication title
Proceedings of the 27th International Applied Geochemistry Symposium 2015
Pagination
1-6
Department/School
School of Natural Sciences
Publisher
Association of Applied Geochemists
Place of publication
Arizona, USA
Event title
27th International Applied Geochemistry Symposium 2015
Event Venue
Arizona, USA
Date of Event (Start Date)
2015-04-20
Date of Event (End Date)
2015-04-24
Rights statement
Copyright unknown
Repository Status
Restricted
Socio-economic Objectives
Other mineral resources (excl. energy resources) not elsewhere classified