|

The following are selected text excerpts from the November
6, 2000 Petrographic Report on 25 Polished Thin Sections by
Vancouver Petrographics Ltd. on the Alto de Lipangue gold/copper
property.
The complete report is available for viewing at the corporate
offices of
Medinah Mining, Inc.

PETROGRAPHIC
REPORT ON 25 POLISHED THIN SECTIONS
LIPANGUE AND LAS DOS MARIAS GOLD-COPPER
PROPERTIES
METROPOLITAN REGION, CHILE
FOR
Medinah Mining, Inc.
Report
for: Les Price
Medinah Mining, Inc.
301-255 West 1st Street
North Vancouver, B.C.
V7M 3G8
November.
6, 2000.
SUMMARY:
The
rocks in this suite of samples are mainly strongly altered,
making recognition of primary lithology difficult. The first
five samples, from 113 to 190 m, and the last sample at 325m,
still display recognizable texture. In the upper 190 m, three
of the samples (113, 170, and 190 m) appear to be a porphyritic
to hypidiomorphic, clinopyroxene-?hornblende (or clinopyroxene-?orthopyroxene)
bearing diorite to monzodiorite or (less likely) noritic leucomonzogabbro.
The latter classification would result if the relict altered
mafic in these rocks was orthopyroxene. These rocks are composed
of seriate-textured to porphyritic oligoclase-andesine, clinopyroxene,
and relict ?hornblende or ?orthopyroxene, now pseudomorphed
by amphibole and chlorite, in a matrix of K-feldspar and minor
quartz. The samples from 175 and 179 m differ in containing
significant quartz (possibly mainly secondary in the former,
but distinctly phyric and primary in the latter); these smaples,
particulary the latter, could represent crystal-lithic tuffs.
The last sample, from 325 m, is a seriate-textured quartz
monzonite; note that since the amount and style of quartz
in this sample are somewhat similar to that of quartz in many
of the altered rocks higher up in the hole, it is possible
that this could be a protolith for those samples. However,
it appears to be somewhat less mafic than most of them, suggesting
that a diorite or quartz diorite rather like that from 113.70
m or 317.35 m could also be a viable protolith.
There
appears to be an increase in level of alteration in the sequence
from about 200 m on, with increasing ?early potassic K-feldspar
and quartz alteration replacing ?plagioclase, culminating
in quartz-sulfide stockwork at 221-225 m and again around
290-310 m and 320-325 m. It is not clear that all or even
most of the K-feldspar in these rocks is secondary since it
is only rarely observed to be directly controlled by fractures
or veins. Also, the presence of abundant primary or late-magmatic
K-feldspar in the sample from 325 m, coupled with the difficulty
of recognizing the primary lithology in these strongly altered
rocks, raises the possibility that some or most of the disseminated
K-feldspar is primary, derived from a rock such as the quartz
monzonite at 325 m. However, against these arguments must
be set the overall observation that K-feldspar is most abundant
in the zone of most altered rocks (this can best be seen by
laying out the stained offcuts).
Most
of these (?potassic) altered rocks are also overprinted by
an episode of phyllic (clay-sericite-chlorite-rutile, +
quartz, calcite to ?ankeritic carbonate, sulfides) or locally
?advanced argillic alteration (possibly including ?pyrophyllite
in addition to the phyllic mineral assemblage) that may be
later than or ?partly synchronous with the ?potassic alteration.
Outside the (?potassic)-phyllic zone (i.e. above 200 m, below
325 m and possibly in one sample from 299 m), alteration is
mainly propylitic (chlorite-epidote-calcite) to transitional
"mafic potassic"-propylitic (amphibole, alkali feldspar
including K-feldspar, quartz, magnetite, sphene, apatite).
Note that magnetite, common in the upper part of the hole,
is destroyed in the central and lower parts of this zone (magnetite
occurs from 170 to 213 m except for the crystal tuff at 179
m, and then not again until the last sample from 325.60 m).
Sulfides
are mainly pyrite with minor to trace chalcopyrite and rare
bornite; traces of Fe-poor (colourless) sphalerite, containing
myriads of microscopic chalcopyrite blebs, are found in two
samples (224 and 231 m); galena is found with sphalerite in
224 m. Chalcopyrite has more limited distribution than pyrite,
and is commonly found associated with pyrite only in the vein
or fracture zones in the sample rather than with the disseminated
pyrite. Chalcopyrite is really only abundant in one very mafic
sample (massive chlorite+calcite-quartz-rutile from
299 m). The bornite occurs in only one sample, from 175 m,
also a relatively mafic rock altered to a ?skarn or "mafic
potassic" assemblage including clinopyroxene, calcic
plagioclase, epidote, quartz, magnetite, sphene and apatite.
Craig
H.B. Leitch, Ph.D. P.Eng
492 Isabella Point Road,
Salt Spring Island, B.C. Canada
V8K 1V4
L00-13-113.70:
PROPYLITIC-?POTASSIC (CHLORITE-KSPAR-EPIDOTE-CALCITE-AMPHIBOLE)
ALTERED HORNBLENDE PYROXENE DIORITE OR ?NORITIC LEUCO-GABBRO
Hand
sample is a grey-green, medium-grained intrusive rock of intermediate
composition (mainly plagioclase and relict mafic minerals).
The rock is not magnetic, but shows minor reaction to cold
dilute HCl; minor yellow stain in the etched slab suggests
K-feldspar replaces plagioclase. Modal mineralogy in polished
thin section is approximately:
| Plagioclase
(?oligoclase) |
45%
|
| Chlorite
|
25%
|
| K-feldspar
(after plagioclase) |
10%
|
| Quartz
(?partly secondary) |
5%
|
| Clinopyroxene
|
5%
|
| Epidote,
zoisite |
5%
|
| Amphibole
(partly secondary) |
1-2%
|
| Carbonate
|
1-2%
|
| Sphene,
rutile, ilmenite |
1-2%
|
| Apatite
|
<1%
|
This
sample is composed mainly of altered plagioclase and lesser
elongated relic mafics, with a holocrystalline texture. Scattered
opaques are mainly sphene and rutile.
Plagioclase
about An25-30 forms mainly euhedral crystals up to 1.5 mm
in diameter that are moderately altered (20-40% replaced)
by epidote and by innumerable microfractures of K-feldspar
or rare carbonate. Minor quartz, likely partly primary, forms
irregular crystals up to 0.5 mm across in interstitial positions
or partly intergrown with/replacing plagioclase.
There
appear to have been at least two mafic minerals present. Relict
clinopyroxene has euhedral outlines up to 1.5 mm in size,
now partly replaced by zoisite and pale-coloured secondary
amphibole plus lesser carbonate (likely calcite). Possible
former ??orthopyroxene or ?amphibole now occurs as euhedral
relics up to 1.5 mm long completely pseudomorphed by fine-grained
chlorite, possibly with "hydrobiotite". Minor pale-coloured
amphibole, likely secondary, is also associated with the latter
mafic relics. The pseudomorphs have extinction parallel to
their length and to the fibres of the chlorite, square cross-sections,
and contain minute crystals of rutile. Larger aggregates of
rutile in the cores of sphene aggregates up to 0.6 mm in diameter,
are probably after original ilmeno-magnetite, of which rare
tabular crystals up to 0.5 mm remain. Interstices between
plagioclase and euhedral mafics are also filled by a second
variety of chlorite.
In
summary, this appears to have been a pyroxene-hornblende diorite
or possibly leucocratic gabbro (even noritic gabbro if it
did contain orthopyroxene rather than amphibole, as well as
clinopyroxene). Original quartz content was probably less
than 5%; the plagioclase composition may have been more calcic.
Alteration is moderate propylitic or ?transitional potassic
(chlorite/hydrobiotite, K-feldspar, epidote, amphibole, carbonate,
quartz, rutile), but there is no sulfide. The K-feldspar could
be late magmatic rather than hydrothermal in origin.
L00-13-170.00:
WEAK PROPYLITIC (CHLORITE-EPIDOTE-SPHENE/RUTILE) ALTERED,
PORPHYRITIC ?PYROXENE MONZODIORITE OR ??NORITIC LEUCOGABBRO
Hand
sample is a fine-grained, dark grey-green, slightly altered
vaguely porphyritic intrusive rock. The rock is weakly magnetic
but shows no reaction to cold dilute HCl, and minor yellow
stain for K-feldspar in the etched slab. Modal mineralogy
in polished thin section is approximately:
| Plagioclase
(?andesine) |
60%
|
| Clinopyroxene
(?augite) |
10%
|
| Amphibole
(partly secondary) |
10%
|
| K-feldspar
(matrix) |
10%
|
| Chlorite
|
5%
|
| Epidote,
zoisite |
2-3%
|
| Sphene,
rutile |
1-2%
|
| Magnetite
|
<1%
|
| Chalcopyrite
|
tr
|
This
slide consists of about 25% scattered plagioclase and 10-15%
glomeratic clinopyroxene phenocrysts in a fine-grained groundmass.
Plagioclase
phenocrysts (An45) are euhedral, up to 5 mm long, and show
minor alteration to epidote/zoisite plus fracturing by a low-relief
mineral (?Kspar or zeolite). Some crystals are strongly zoned,
with narrow rims of ?oligoclase (see photomicrograph).
Clinopyroxene
phenocrysts have euhedral but ragged (corroded) outlines up
to 2 mm in diameter and are mantled by pale olive green amphibole
(?hornblende) in parallel position. A separate type of relict
mafic forms smaller crystals with euhedral outlines up to
1 mm in diameter, pseudomorphed by either secondary amphibole
or chlorite-hydrobiotite as in the sample from 113.70. It
is not clear if these were originally hornblende or ?orthopyroxene;
the latter is suggested by the fact that they are more altered
than the clinopyroxene in the same sample, and there is unaltered
amphibole present in the section.
Scattered
aggregates of sphene up to 0.7 mm across, commonly cored by
minute crystals of rutile, likely represent the sites of former
ilmenite; they are locally associated with euhedral magnetite
to 0.4 mm in diameter, and trace chalcopyrite up to 75 microns
long. Very rare chalcopyrite also forms minute blebs included
in plagioclase.
The
groundmass consists of euhedral plagioclase microlites, mainly
<0.25 mm long but in places with a tendency to seriate
texture (crystals up to 0.5 mm), with lesser euhedral clinopyroxene
(<0.1 mm long), subhedral amphibole (<0.15 mm), and
interstitial K-feldspar, chlorite, epidote and opaque oxides
of finer grain size.
The
ratio of total plagioclase to total feldspar of about 0.85
indicates that this rock may be classified as a porphyritic
pyroxene monzodiorite (could have been leucocratic noritic
monzogabbro if ?orthopyroxene were initially present). Alteration
is propylitic, to chlorite-epidote-sphene/rutile +
trace chalcopyrite.
L00-13-174.9:
SKARN OR "MAFIC POTASSIC" (CLINOPYROXENE-PLAGIOCLASE-QUARTZ-
EPIDOTE-APATITE-MAGNETITE-CHALCOPYRITE+BORNITE) ALTERED,
QUARTZ-PHYRIC INTRUSIVE OR VOLCANIC ROCK
Hand
sample is a mottled, grey-green, fine- to medium-grained,
altered intrusive rock. Fine sulfides, including chalcopyrite
(asociated with magnetite), accompany the mottling and a pale
creamy-coloured, fracture controlled alteration that surrounds
darker, rounded mottles. There is trace reaction to cold dilute
HCl along hairline fractures, but no stain for K-feldspar
in the etched slab. Modal mineralogy in polished thin section
is approximately:
| Plagioclase
(?oligoclase, largely secondary) |
35%
|
| (relict
labradorite) |
5%
|
| Clinopyroxene
(?diopside; secondary) |
35%
|
| Quartz
(?largely secondary except phenocrysts) |
15%
|
| Magnetite
|
5%
|
| Epidote
|
1-2%
|
| Chalcopyrite
|
1%
|
| Sphene
|
1%
|
| Bornite
|
1%
|
| Apatite
|
1%
|
This
slide consists mainly of a fine-grained intergrowth of clinopyroxene,
plagioclase feldspar, quartz and magnetite averaging about
0.15 mm or less in diameter, and containing scattered quartz
crystals with euhedral to subhedral outlines up to 1.5 mm
in diameter. Rarely, remnants of twinned calcic plagioclase
phenocrysts (An60) up to 1.5 mm long are visible.
The
dark mottles, possibly representing sites of former mafic
crystals, are now composed mainly of clinopyroxene (pale green
?diopside rarely over 0.1 mm in diameter), commonly with minor
sphene of <30 microns diameter. The creamy-coloured areas
surrounding the mottles appear to be composed mainly of secondary
alkali feldspar, possibly of oligoclase composition to judge
by the relief against quartz, and lesser pyroxene and quartz,
all forming subhedra mainly <0.2 mm in size.
The
dark mottles are generally centered on areas of disseminated
or clotty magnetite, in places with associated sulfides, significant
epidote and minor apatite. Magnetite forms subhedra generally
<0.35 mm in diameter; chalcopyrite forms subhedra of similar
size in places intergrown with bornite of similar size. Epidote
forms subhedra up to 0.1 mm in size with pale yellow pleochroism
indicating relatively low Fe, high Ca content; apatite forms
subhedra to 0.2 mm in aggregates to 1 mm across. The lack
of pyrite, presence of bornite with chalcopyrite suggest a
low sulfide, low total sulfur part of a porphyry copper system,
commonly found associated with magnetite.
Although
remnants of the original ?intrusive or volcanic rock can be
seen in places in the slide, this is clearly a strongly altered
rock. Presence of phenocryst quartz suggests the protolith
was different in composition from the samples at 113/170 m,
more like the sample from 178.6. The alteration, to pyroxene,
plagioclase, quartz, epidote, apatite, magnetite and copper
sulfides, suggests a skarn or an unusual type of "mafic
potassic" alteration in an island-arc porphyry copper
system (somewat similar alteration is seen in some zones at
Island Copper, B.C. and the Tanama and Helecho deposits in
Puerto Rico).
L00-13-178.6:
?PROPYLITIC (ALKALI FELDSPAR-?QUARTZ-CARBONATE-EPIDOTE- CHLORITE-ZEOLITE-SPHENE-APATITE)
ALTERED ?CRYSTAL LITHIC TUFF
Hand
sample is a pale creamy to greenish coloured, medium-grained,
felsic rock containing abundant crowded lithic clasts and
crystal shards with a jumbled appearance like a crystal-lithic
tuff, cut by a sheeted system of pale greenish-white veinlets.
The rock is not magnetic but shows strong reaction to cold
dilute HCl, and some yellow stain for K-feldspar in the etched
slab. Modal mineralogy in polished thin section is approximately:
| Quartz
(partly secondary) |
50%
|
| Plagioclase
(?partly secondary) |
25%
|
| K-feldspar
(in clasts) |
10%
|
| Carbonate
(mainly calcite, veins) |
5-7%
|
| Epidote
|
3-5%
|
| Chlorite
|
2-3%
|
| ?Zeolite
|
1-2%
|
| Sphene
|
1-2%
|
| Apatite
|
<1%
|
This
slide is composed of tightly packed, abundant silicic-feldspathic
lithic clasts mostly <0.5 cm in diameter and scattered
quartz crystals or aggregates (?recrystallized crystals) mostly
<2 mm in diameter. The rock is clast-supported, with very
little matrix recognizable between the clasts.
The
lithic clasts are composed mainly of either fine-grained quartz
(probably mostly secondary; remnants of former plagioclase
barely visible in some) or alkali feldspar and quartz. The
latter commonly stain yellow in the etched slab, indicating
that significant K-feldspar is present, which could be secondary
(associated with the vein zone crossing the sample) but this
is not obvious. Grain size form both quartz and feldspar in
the clasts is generally <0.1 mm.
Clots
of alteration minerals with irregular outlines up to about
1.5 mm across are composed of epidote, chlorite, apatite,
carbonate and ?zeolite; relict plagioclase in some suggests
they may be after former calcic plagioclase, but abundant
sphene in others suggest derivation from former mafic crystals
such as ?pyroxene. Negative relief of the plagioclase against
quartz suggests it may be sodic (?oligoclase or albite), and
in part secondary. It is not clear how much of the quartz
is secondary, given the abundant quartz in many of the clasts.
Veins,
up to about 1 mm thick, are composed mainly of carbonate (likely
mostly calcite, subhedra to 0.5 mm) with minor epidote (subhedra
<30 microns) and quartz (euhedra to 0.2 mm). In places
the veins contain central fillings
In
summary, strong propylitic alteration to alkali feldspar (mainly
sodic, but possibly also including Kspar), epidote, chlorite,
carbonate, zeolite, sphene, apatite, and possibly quartz,
has made it difficult to guess the original protolith for
this crystal-lithic tuff. It may have been of felsic to intermediate
composition, depending on how much mafic material was present.
L00-13-190.4:
WEAK PROPYLITIC (AMPHIBOLE-CHLORITE-EPIDOTE-CALCITE) ALTERED,
PORPHYRITIC ?PYROXENE MONZODIORITE (OR ??NORITIC LEUCOGABBRO)
Hand
sample is dark grey-green, fine-grained, massive porphyritic
mafic to intermediate high-level intrusive rock. The rock
is weakly magnetic, reacts to cold dilute HCl along narrow
fractures, and shows minor yellow stain for K-feldspar in
the groundmass of the etched slab. Modal mineralogy in polished
thin section is approximately:
| Plagioclase
(andesine-oligoclase) |
65%
|
| Clinopyroxene
(?augite) |
10%
|
| K-feldspar
(groundmass) |
10%
|
| Amphibole
(mainly secondary) |
5%
|
| Chlorite
|
5%
|
| Magnetite
|
1-2%
|
| Sphene,
rutile |
1%
|
| Quartz
|
1%
|
| Carbonate
(calcite) |
1%
|
| Epidote
|
<1%
|
This
slide is composed mainly of plagioclase and lesser clinopyroxene
with a seriate to porphyritic texture. Plagioclase forms euhedral
crystals ranging from phenocrysts up to 3 mm long down to
groundmass crystals of less than about 0.5 mm, but ranging
from 0.1 to almost 1 mm long. Plagioclase phenocrysts are
zoned, with cores about An40 and rims about An20; alteration
to epidote and carbonate is rare. Clinopyroxene forms euhedral
phenocrysts (also oscillatory zoned) up to 2 mm long and smaller
seriate subhedra mostly <0.5 mm in diameter. Pyroxene is
occasionally rimmed or intergrown with olive-green amphibole
subhedra up to the size of the pyroxene.
Interstices
between plagioclase crystals are filled with small (mainly
<0.3 mm diameter) subhedral altered mafic relics and 0.1
mm magnetite plus a mesh of anhedral K-feldspar to 0.15 mm,
and minor sphene (subhedra to 50 microns, containing minute
?rutile) and quartz (irregular anhedra to 0.1 mm). The mafic
relics are altered at the core to pale green chlorite, but
the rims appear to be fibrous, olive-green to brownish ?secondary
amphibole, plus minor epidote. Rectangular to square outlines
suggest they could have been ?orthopyroxene; minor non-fibrous,
fresh olive-green amphibole forming subhedra to 0.25 mm intergrown
with the relics argues against the mafic relics having originally
been hornblende. However, lath-shaped mafic relics partly
replacing clinopyroxene, and now composed of clear, subhedral
or in places fibrous secondary amphibole, show that hornblende
is present. Thus the question of original ?orthopyroxene remains
open.
In
summary, this appears to represent a porphyritic pyroxene
monzodiorite (or noritic leucogabbro if there originally was
orthopyroxene present), with similarities to the sample from
170.0 m. Alteration is weak propylitic (secondary amphibole,
chlorite, epidote, carbonate, sphene).
L00-13-212.0:
PHYLLIC (SERICITE-CHLORITE-PYRITE-RUTILE), POSSIBLY EARLIER
POTASSIC (KSPAR-CHLORITE-MAGNETITE) ALTERED ?CRYSTAL TUFF
Hand
sample is pale grey-green, fine-grained, massive, altered
?porphyritic felsic-intermediate ?volcanic or intrusive rock
with small vugs and fine disseminated pyrite. The rock is
slightly magnetic, shows no reaction to cold dilute HCl, but
stains extensively for K-feldspar in the etched slab. Modal
mineralogy in polished thin section is approximately:
| Plagioclase
(relict) |
45%
|
| Sericite,
?clay |
20%
|
| K-feldspar
(?partly secondary) |
15%
|
| Chlorite
|
10%
|
| Quartz
(?mainly primary) |
5-7%
|
| Pyrite,
trace chalcopyrite |
1-2%
|
| Magnetite
|
1%
|
| Rutile,
sphene |
1%
|
| Apatite,
zircon |
<1%
|
This
sample consists of variably altered plagioclase, relict mafic
sites, and scattered quartz (?relict phenocrysts or shards).
Although it is difficult to be sure due to the alteration,
there is a vaguely tuffaceous texture to the rock.
Plagioclase
appears to have formed sub- to euhedral crystals up to about
3 mm long that are now extensively replaced by fine-grained
clay-sericite (flakes to 50 micron size) and, in many places,
apparently by K-feldspar. The K-spar replacement is earlier
than the clay-sericite, and spreads along cleavages throughout
the plagioclase crystal, leaving vaguely twinned remnants.
The K-feldspar could have been late magmatic in origin since
it does not appear to be related to fractures or veins, or
it may be hydrothermal, related to a structure larger than
the scale of the hand specimen. Kspar also appears to form
smaller crystals mixed with minor quartz as groundmass crystals
that may be ?primary.
Mafic
relics have subhedral outlines up to 1.5 mm long that are
permissive of former ?pyroxene or amphibole. They are pseudomorphed
by fine-grained (<0.1 mm) pale green chlorite and minor
sericite, plus traces of rutile, sphene, magnetite and pyrite.
Rare small apatite euhedra are up to 0.1 mm long, and rare
euhdral zircon are <75 microns long. Euhedral to subhedral
magnetite crystals are mainly <0.2 mm in size. Rutile forms
subhedral aggregates up to 0.85 mm across of minute euhedra.
Scattered euhedral pyrite crystals are mostly <1 mm in
diameter; rare chalcopyrite up to 40 microns in diameter is
associated with chlorite.
It
is not clear what the protolith for this phyllic (sericite-chlorite-pyrite-rutile+sphene)
altered rock was; also, there may have been minor potassic
(Kspar-magnetite) alteration prior to phyllic alteration,
which the chlorite would fit better with. It is vaguely tuffaceous
or porphyritic, and contains phyric quartz like samples from
174.9 and 178.6; it may have been a crystal tuff of intermediate
composition.
L00-13-213.0:
PHYLLIC (SERICITE-CHLORITE-CARBONATE-PYRITE-RUTILE), POSSIBLY
EARLIER POTASSIC (QUARTZ-KSPAR-?MAGNETITE) ALTERED ?CRYSTAL
TUFF
Hand
sample is grey-green, massive,medium-grained, vaguely tuffaceous
or porphyritic ?volcanic or intrusive rock, slightly bleached
towards a fracture coated with white sericite or ?clay. The
rock is weakly magnetic, shows strong reaction to cold dilute
HCl, and strong yellow stain for K-feldspar in the etched
slab. Modal mineralogy in polished thin section is approximately:
| K-feldspar
(?largely secondary) |
35%
|
| Quartz
(?partly secondary) |
25%
|
| Relict
plagioclase |
10%
|
| Sericite,
?clay |
10%
|
| Chlorite
|
10%
|
| Carbonate
(partly calcite) |
5-7%
|
| Magnetite
|
1%
|
| Rutile
|
1%
|
| Pyrite
|
<1%
|
This
sample consists mainly of relict altered feldspars, relict
mafic sites, and quartz. The alteration is intense enough
to conceal primary textures, so that it is not clear whether
it is a crystal tuff or a porphyritic intrusive.
Relict
feldspar crystals have euhedral to somewhat ragged outlines
up to almost 3 mm long. Vaguely defined relict twinning and
the shapes suggest most were probably originally plagioclase;
however, most are now replaced by secondary alkali feldspar
that stains yellow for K-spar in the etched slab. Most of
this secondary alkali feldspar is also altered by fine-grained
sericite or clay, but this appears to be an overprint. The
K-feldspar is not clearly secondary hydrothermal in origin
(not related to veins or fractures); it could be late magmatic,
or the controlling structure could be larger than the scale
of the hand specimen available.
Quartz
is abundant, forming mainly subhedral to anhedral crystals
up to about 1 mm in diameter that poikilitically enclose other
crystals and commonly have overgrowth rims, suggesting some
may be secondary in nature. Again, as for K-spar, the period
of quartz overgrowths may have been late magmatic rather than
hydrothermal. Narrow quartz veinlets <0.1 mm thick are
rare, but in places they grade into irregular areas of fine-grained
quartz in a reticulate network.
Relict
mafic sites with non-definitive ragged, irregular outlines
mostly less than 1 mm in diameter, are pseudomorphed by chlorite,
carbonate (possibly calcite and ?ankerite), sericite and rutile,
or less commonly magnetite or pyrite. Cores of the pseudomorphs
tend to be chlorite and minor sericite; rims tend to be carbonate.
Rutile aggregates may be up to 1 mm across, composed of minute
<30 micron crystals. Magnetite forms subhedra up to 0.25
mm in diameter; pyrite euhedra are mainly <0.15 mm in diameter.
This
sample appears to represent a ?crystal tuff (or ?high-level
porphyritic intrusive) of intermediate composition that has
undergone extensive replacement by quartz and Kspar (magnetite
may be partly secondary and have formed during this stage),
followed by phyllic alteration to sericite, chlorite, carbonate,
pyrite and rutile.
L00-13-215.95:
PHYLLIC (SERICITE-CHLORITE-PYRITE-SPHENE/RUTILE), POSSIBLY
EARLIER POTASSIC (KSPAR-QUARTZ) ALTERED ?CRYSTAL TUFF
Hand
sample is grey-greenish to creamy-buff in colour, fine- to
medium-grained, with an altered ?porphyritic or tuffaceous
texture, minor irregular quartz veins, and disseminated sulfides.
The rock is not magnetic and shows no reaction to cold dilute
HCl, but there is abundant stain for K-feldspar in the etched
slab. Modal mineralogy in polished thin section is approximately:
| K-feldspar
(?largely secondary) |
45%
|
| Quartz
(partly secondary) |
25%
|
| Sericite,
?clay |
20%
|
| Chlorite
|
5%
|
| Pyrite
|
3-5%
|
| Sphene,
rutile |
1-2%
|
| Zircon
|
tr
|
This
slide is similar to the previous slide, composed of abundant
relict K-feldspar, lesser quartz, sericitized relict ?plagioclase
sites, and minor chlorite, pyrite and sphene/rutile after
mafic minerals. It is so strongly altered that the original
texture is difficult to discern, suggestive of either a crystal
tuff or a porphyritic high-level intrusive rock.
Sericite
(and ?clay) altered plagioclase sites have subhedral outlines
up to 0.5 cm long that are pseudomorphed by 10-20 micron flakes.
Other, vaguely defined sites of similar shape and size appear
to be replaced by K-feldspar, quartz and sericite. The K-feldspar
forms subhedral crystals mainly <0.5 mm in diameter, themselves
partly replaced by fine subhedral flakes of sericite. In places
what appears to be relict twinning, mimicked by lath-shaped
Kspar and quartz, suggests that the Kspar and quartz has replaced
original plagioclase. If so, then this sample displays very
strong potassic alteration, later overprinted by phyllic alteration.
The ?potassic alteration is pervasive; the phyllic alteration
appears to increase towards one end of the slide, probably
near a later fracture.
Quartz
forms irregular, corroded-looking ?relict primary crystals
up to 3 mm in diameter, in places with what appear to be minor
overgrowths at the margins, and abundant finer-grained material
in the matrix of the rock that is clearly secondary in places
(distributed along narrow veinlets up to 1 mm thick, with
strongly altered margins).
Mafic
sites are less well-defined, consisting of irregular patches
up to about 1 mm across of slightly coarser-grained (<0.3
mm) sericite or muscovite, in places with chlorite up to 0.1
mm, and variable amounts of sphene (subhedra to 0.4 mm, in
places with included minute rutile), or pyrite (euhedra mostly
<0.35 mm in diameter). Rare zircon forms euhedra to 40
microns diameter.
L00-13-219.70:
PHYLLIC (SERICITE-CHLORITE-CARBONATE-PYRITE-RUTILE) AND EARLY
?POTASSIC (KSPAR-QUARTZ) ALTERED ?CRYSTAL TUFF OR INTRUSIVE
Hand
sample is medium-grained and massive, with an altered, vaguely
porphyritic texture, containing relict mafics cored by dark
green chlorite and rimmed by buff-brown ?ankerite. The rock
is not magnetic and shows no reaction to cold dilute HCl,
but there is abundant stain for K-feldspar in the etched slab.
Modal mineralogy in polished thin section is approximately:
| K-feldspar
(?largely secondary) |
40%
|
| Quartz
(partly secondary) |
20%
|
| Sericite,
clay |
15%
|
| Chlorite
|
15%
|
| Carbonate
(?dolomite or ankerite) |
5%
|
| Pyrite
|
1-2%
|
| Rutile,
sphene |
1%
|
This
slide is composed of large subhedral crystals of simple Carlsbad
twinned K-feldspar up to 2.5 mm long, sericitized and chloritized
?mafic crystal relics, and interstitial quartz.
The
K-feldspar in places reveal traces of relict twinned ?plagioclase
within them, suggesting that the Kspar has replaced formerly
more extensive plagioclase feldspar.
Quartz
mostly forms subhedral to irregular crystals that are optically
continuous for up to 1 mm and appear to be replacing or overgrowing
surrounding feldspar.
Sericite-carbonate-chlorite
altered relics have euhedral squarish outlines up to 2 mm
across; they may have been ?plagioclase or mafic crystals.
Chlorite-altered relics have irregular outlines up to 3.5
mm across, likely after former mafic minerals. Chlorite, forming
subhedral flakes mostly <0.15 mm in diameter, tends to
form the cores of the relics, with carbonate (and rutile)
at the rims. Carbonate, forming subhedra mostly <50 microns
in diameter, is likely dolomite or ankerite since it does
not appear to reaxt to HCl in hand specimen.
Pyrite
forms coarse euhedral cubic crystals up to 1 mm in diameter,
locally aggregating to several mm across. Rutile occurs as
minute subhedra, possibly with traces of sphene, commonly
enclosed in carbonate.
It
is difficult to tell, given the level of alteration, but this
sample appears to have been a ?tuffaceous rock, perhaps a
crystal tuff of mafic to intermediate composition (although
the texture is also permissive of a porphyritic intrusive).
It has undergone significant ?early potassic alteration to
K-spar and quartz, overprinted by later phyllic alteration
to sericite, chlorite, pyrite, dolomitic carbonate and rutile.
L00-13-221.50:
INTENSE PHYLLIC (QUARTZ STOCKWORKED, CLAY-SERICITE-CHLORITE-
CARBONATE-RUTILE-SULFIDES) AND ?EARLY KSPAR ALTERED IGNEOUS
ROCK
Hand
sample appears to be a hydrothermal breccia, composed of angular,
irregular, vaguely defined blocks of rock in a matrix of quartz
veins. The included blocks of rock are greenish and buff-brown,
similar to the previous sample (219.70); significant pyrite
is associated with the quartz vein stockwork. Core areas of
the blocks stain yellow for K-feldspar in the etched slab,
suggesting outer rims of the blocks have been overprinted
by silicification. Modal mineralogy in polished thin section
is approximately:
| Quartz
(largely secondary) |
45%
|
| Clay-sericite
|
25%
|
| K-feldspar
(?secondary) |
10%
|
| Chlorite
|
10%
|
| Carbonate
(?dolomite/ankerite) |
5%
|
| Pyrite
|
2-3%
|
| Rutile
|
1-2%
|
| Chalcopyrite
|
<1%
|
Remnants
of wall rock in this sample consist of rounded to irregular-shaped
patches of clay-sericite, chlorite, carbonate, and rutile
with relics of K-feldspar, all replaced by and separated by
irregular masses of quartz. The texture of the former rock
is virtually destroyed at the thin section scale. Former ?plagioclase
crystals appear to be completely replaced by clay-sericite
(microscopic flakes rarely over 15 microns in diameter), in
places intimately mixed with chlorite of similar size. Even
K-feldspar crystals, with subhedral outlines up to 1 mm across,
are partly to mostly replaced by clay-sericite. Former ?mafic
crystals are pseudomorphed by patches of chlorite (flakes
up to 25 microns in diameter), carbonate (likely dolomite
or ankerite, subhedra to 25 microns), and abundant rutile
or leucoxene (anhedral patches up to 0.2 mm across composed
of mostly amorphous material).
The
intervening stocwork areas are composed of anhedral to subhedral
interlocking secondary quartz crystals with minor clay-sericite,
chlorite, sulfides and rutile interstitial to the quartz.
It is not possible to be sure, but it appears that silicification
and clay-sericite-chlorite-pyrite-rutile alteration spread
out from the quartz stockwork. (An alternative would be that
secondary quartz accompanied the K-feldspar alteration, which
appears to be earlier.)
Pyrite,
forming large subhedral crystals up to 2 mm across, and traces
of chalcopyrite, forming anhedral crystals mostly <0.2
mm across, are found in both the quartz stockwork and the
altered wall rock fragments; chalcopyrite is closely associated
with chlorite, and probably represents replacement of former
mafic minerals. Note that minor amounts of chalcopyrite present
as minute (<20 micron) crystals encapsulated in quartz
might not be liberated even during fine grinding of the rock.
L00-13-224.20:
INTENSE PHYLLIC (QUARTZ STOCKWORKED, CLAY-SERICITE-CHLORITE-
RUTILE-SULFIDES) AND ?EARLY KSPAR ALTERED IGNEOUS ROCK
Hand
sample is similar to 221.50, consisting of angular, pale green
altered fragments in a quartz vein matrix or stocwork. Minor
pyritic sulfides are associated with the stockwork, and minor
buff-coloured ?carbonate occurs with the chloritic fragments.
The fragments show abundant yellow stain for K-feldspar in
the etched slab. Modal mineralogy in polished thin section
is approximately:
| Quartz
(mainly secondary) |
50%
|
| K-feldspar
(?largely secondary) |
25%
|
| Clay-sericite
|
15%
|
| Chlorite
|
5-7%
|
| Pyrite
|
2-3%
|
| Chalcopyrite
|
<1%
|
| Rutile,
leucoxene |
<1%
|
| Sphalerite
|
<1%
|
| Galena
|
tr
|
Wallrock
fragments are mostly composed of large irregular-shaped patches,
up to 2 mm across, of clay-sericite and lesser chlorite that
appear to be replacing feldspar (mostly K-feldspar to judge
by the extent of yellow stain in the etched slab). These patches
are intergrown with secondary quartz as sub- to anhedral crystals
up to 2.5 mm in diameter with ragged margins suggesting they
are overgrowing the adjacent minerals. Sericite flakes are
rarely up to 35 microns in diameter, mixed in places with
a very pale greenish or brownish chlorite of similar size.
Most chlorite, however, is bright green, forming flakes up
to almost 100 microns in diameter at the edges of chloritic
patches. Minor rutile is mixed with the chlorite as irregular
aggregates up to 0.5 mm across composed of almost amorphous
material (leucoxene).
The
quartz stockwork is composed of coarse subhedral crystals
up to almost 0.5 cm in diameter. Minor amounts of clay-sericite
and chlorite are found along the boundaries between the crystals.
Sulfides,
principally coarse euhedral pyrite as cubes up to 4 mm across,
tend to line the margins of wall rock fragments at the contact
with quartz vein stockwork. The pyrite contains abundant inclusions
of silicates and rutile, and in places is associated with
traces of chalcopyrite, sphalerite and galena. Sphalerite
is associated with traces of galena and chalcopyrite, and
contains abundant submicroscopic inclusions of chalcopyrite
(see photomicrograph). Chalcopyrite is also found as minute
(<25 micron) blebs in the highly altered wallrock, especially
hosted in chlorite.
The
original protolith is not determinable due to the intense
phyllic (quartz-clay-sericite-chlorite- pyrite-rutile) and
possibly earlier ?potassic (K-spar, quartz) alteration.
L00-13-229.10:
INTENSE PHYLLIC (CLAY-SERICITE-CHLORITE-PYRITE-RUTILE) AND
?EARLY KSPAR ALTERED/RARELY QUARTZ-KSPAR VEINED ?INTRUSIVE
ROCK
Hand
sample is a greenish grey, massive, medium-grained, altered,
pyritic ?intrusive or tuffaceous rock cut by narrow white
veins that stain yellow for K-feldspar, as does much of the
matrix of the rock. Modal mineralogy in polished thin section
is approximately:
| Quartz
(partly secondary) |
30%
|
| K-feldspar
(?largely secondary) |
25%
|
| Clay-sericite
|
25%
|
| Chlorite
|
15%
|
| Pyrite
|
4-5%
|
| Rutile
|
<1%
|
| Chalcopyrite,
trace ?galena |
tr
|
This
sample consists of irregular-shaped patches of clay-sericite
altered feldspar (probably after both K-feldspar and plagioclase),
subhedral to irregular patches of chlorite and lesser clays-sericite
(after former mafics), all strongly overprinted by secondary
quartz that may have grown outwards from clumps of primary
quartz.
K-feldspar,
indicated by the yellow stain in the etched slab, is difficult
to recognize in thin section. It appears to form subhedral
crystals up to about 1 mm in diameter, that are mostly about
half replaced by clay-sericite and minor chlorite, with a
lamellar texture that may reflect primary plagioclase twinning.
This suggests that the K-feldspar may be largely secondary,
having replaced former plagioclase in an early potassic phase
of alteration. Some of the secondary quartz, which forms subhedral
crystals up to 2 mm across that poikilitically enclose other
minerals around their margins, may have formed at that time,
but it is difficult to be sure. The possibility of the K-spar
being secondary is supported by the presence of K-feldspar
as euhedral crystals up to 0.25 mm diameter, intergrown with
quartz, along narrow veinlets <1 mm thick.
Most
of the clay-sericite has negative relief compared to quartz
and chlorite, but moderate birefringence, suggesting that
some or all of it could be a montmorillonite- or smectite-group
(swelling) clay. Individual flakes are generally <20 microns
in diameter.
Mafic
relics are pseudomorphed by chlorite as subhedral flakes mostly
<25 microns in diameter, in places with a rim of clay-sericite
or mixed intimately with clay-sericite. Clusters of rutile
up to 0.2 mm across, commonly asociated with the chloritized
mafics, are composed of euhedral dark brown crystals mostly
<75 microns in size. Pyrite occurs as cubic euhedra mostly
<1 mm in diameter, also commonly associated with the chloritized
mafics. Rarely, traces of chalcopyrite form subhedra to 0.15
mm associated with the pyrite crystals, and traces of ?galena
are included in the pyrite crystals.
It
is not clear what the original protolith for this intensely
phyllic (quartz-clay-sericite-chlorite-sulfides-rutile) and
possibly earlier potassic (Kspar-quartz) altered rock was;
it may have been a mafic-intermediate intrusive rock.
L00-13-231.05:
INTENSE PHYLLIC (?QUARTZ, CLAY-SERICITE-CHLORITE-PYRITE-RUTILE)
AND ?EARLY KSPAR-QUARTZ ALTERED ?INTRUSIVE ROCK
Hand
sample is a medium grained, greenish, mottled (strongly altered)
?igneous rock of intermediate to mafic composition, cut by
veins up to 0.7 cm thick containing massive pyrite. Minor
stain for K-feldspar in the etched slab suggests that K-spar
is in part controlled by the veins and therefore is secondary.
Modal mineralogy in polished thin section is approximately:
| Quartz
(largely secondary) |
35%
|
| Chlorite
|
25%
|
| Clay-sericite
|
25%
|
| K-feldspar
(partly secondary) |
10%
|
| Pyrite
|
5%
|
| Rutile
|
<1%
|
| Sphalerite
|
<1%
|
| Chalcopyrite
|
tr
|
This
sample is similar to the previous six or seven samples, with
intense alteration obscuring primary lithology of a fine-grained
?intrusive rock. Irregular-shaped patches of clay-sericite
or chlorite and pyrite+rutile, or mixtures of chlorite
and clay-sericite, are embedded in a matrix of quartz (possibly
largely secondary), K-feldspar and chlorite. It is possible
that the larger patches, about 2 mm in diameter, represent
former phenocrysts of either mafic or feldspar crystals (or
both) but this is not certain since the texture could be merely
due to alteration.
K-feldspar
is difficult to recognize in thin section due probably to
strong replacement by clay-sericite, which forms minute (5
micron) to fine-grained (25 micron) flakes. The shapes of
former feldspar crystals are obscured by strong replacement
around the margins by secondary quartz. The quartz crystals
commonly have subhedral outlines that are optically continuous
for up to 1 mm, poikilitically enclosing altered feldspar
remnants or chloritized mafic relics. It is not clear how
much, if any, of the quartz may have been primary.
Chlorite
forms pale green flakes up to 75 microns in diameter, commonly
containing or associated with pyrite and rutile. Yellowish-brown
rutile forms euhedral crystals up to 0.1 mm diameter, in places
aggregating to 0.25 mm.
Narrow
irregular discontinuous quartz veinlets up to 0.1 mm thick
cross the rock. The major vein is composed of pyrite, with
quartz and chlorite selvages, and appears to have a concentration
of K-feldspar in envelopes along one side of the vein, and
clay-sericite-chlorite on the other side.
Pyrite,
forming euhedral crystals up to several mm across in massive
aggregates in the major vein, or millimeter-sized crystals
in the wallrock, is rarely associated with or contains rounded
inclusions of sphalerite up to 0.75 mm across. The sphalerite
is colourless (Fe-poor) but contains abundant round blebs
of chalcopyrite <10 microns in diameter.
L00-13-241.30:
PHYLLIC (CLAY-SERICITE-CHLORITE-?QUARTZ-PYRITE-RUTILE) AND
?EARLY KSPAR ALTERED IGNEOUS ROCK CUT BY QUARTZ-CHLORITE-PYRITE-
CHALCOPYRITE ZONE
Hand
sample is greenish-grey and strongly altered, with a mottled
to disrupted appearance, cut by irregular zones with pyrite
and chalcopyrite that are associated with stronger chloritization.
There is extensive pale yellow stain for K-feldspar in the
etched slab, likely pale coloured due to clay-sericite alteration
of the feldspar. Modal mineralogy in polished thin section
is approximately:
| Quartz
(?largely secondary) |
40%
|
| Clay-sericite
|
35%
|
| Chlorite
|
10%
|
| K-feldspar
(relict, ?secondary) |
10%
|
| Pyrite
|
3-5%
|
| Chalcopyrite
|
<1%
|
| Rutile
|
<1%
|
| Apatite,
?zircon |
tr
|
The
major altered zone (not a vein) is composed of coarse-grained
subhedal pyrite (aggregates up to 4 mm across) with associated
chalcopyrite (subhedra to 1.2 mm) in a matrix of secondary
quartz (subhedra to 2.5 mm diameter) and chlorite (bright
green rosettes up to 0.25 mm in diameter) plus lesser clay-sericite.
In places the clay-sericite has a radial rosette-like habit
that is similar to pyrophyllite (characteristic of a highly
aluminous assemblage, but it cannot be identifed with certainty
except by microchemical tests such as scanning electron microscope,
or SEM).
Away
from the major altered zone, the wallrock consists mainly
of relict patches of strongly clay-sericite altered feldspar
(partly K-feldspar to judge by the yellow stain in the etched
slab) and chlorite-rutile altered mafic relics, both intensely
overprinted by secondary quartz. Some or most of the K-feldspar
may be secondary; it appears to predate the phyllic (clay-sericite)
alteration. Note that the quartz overprint may have accompanied
the early K-feldspar alteration, or the later phyllic alteration
(or both). Some of the quartz crystals do contain minor clay-sericite
along fractures or in inclusions, and along grain boundaries.
Rare apatite as slender prisms up to 150 microns long, and
?zircon as euhedral crystals to 50 microns long, are included
in the quartz.
In
summary, this is a very strongly to intensely altered rock
of uncertain derivation, with phyllic (clay-sericite-chlorite-?quartz-pyrite-rutile)
alteration apparently increasing towards a major quartz-chlorite-pyrite-chalcopyrite
bearing zone.
L00-13-247.60:
INTENSE PHYLLIC (?QUARTZ-CLAY-SERICITE-CHLORITE-PYRITE-RUTILE-
CARBONATE) AND ?EARLY POTASSIC (KSPAR-QUARTZ) ALTERED ?INTRUSIVE
Hand
sample is green-grey, medium-grained, probably strongly altered
intermediate-mafic ?intrusive rock with irregular clotty zones
of pyrite-quartz-chlorite. Extensive yellow stain in the etched
slab suggests that K-feldspar has replaced most of the ?plagioclase
in the rock. Modal mineralogy in polished thin section is
approximately:
| Quartz
(largely secondary) |
30%
|
| Clay-sericite,
?pyrophyllite |
30%
|
| K-feldspar
(?largely secondary) |
25%
|
| Chlorite
|
10%
|
| Pyrite
|
3-5%
|
| Rutile,
sphene |
1%
|
| Carbonate
(dolomite/ankerite) |
<1%
|
| Chalcopyrite
|
<1%
|
| Apatite,
?Zircon |
tr
|
The
bulk of this slide consists of irregularly intergrown patches
of quartz (probably largely secondary), clay-sericite after
feldspar, and chlorite-pyrite-rutile after mafic minerals.
Average grain size before the intense alteration virtually
destroyed the texture, may have been about 2 mm. Relict twinning
in some of the feldspar relicts is suggestive of former ?plagioclase,
suggesting that much of the K-feldspar now present (identified
mainly on the basis of the yellow stain in the etched slab)
is secondary. The overprint of ?clay-sericite minerals is
heavy, though, obscuring these relationships. The ?clay-sericite
mineralogy consists of abundant very fine flakes, mostly <10
microns in diameter, larger flakes up to about 35 microns,
and elongate fibrous needles up to about 0.25 mm long that
are suggestive of ?pyrophyllite or some other aluminous mineral
rather than sericite. In places these needles form radiating
clusters, mixed with a little rust-stained carbonate (likely
ankerite).
Quartz
forms subhedral crystals that are commonly optically continuous
for up to 1 mm or so, but are clearly formed of many smaller
(about 0.1 mm diameter) crystals that have replaced the surrounding
feldspar. A few larger crystals may be ?primary.
Chlorite
forms subhedral bright green flakes up to 0.15 mm in diameter,
closely associated with sulfides. In places the chlorite is
brownish and finer-grained, mixed with clay-sericite, either
intimately or forming zones at the rims of the pseudomorphed
outlines.
Rutile
occurs as small (<0.1 mm long) subhedra, in aggregates
up to 1.5 mm long, except for slender needles up to 0.5 mm
long included in quartz. Rare ?zircon forms euhedra up to
80 microns long; apatite euhedra are up to 125 microns long.
Pyrite
forms coarse sub- to euhedral crystals up to 2.5 mm in diameter
in aggregate, but apparently built up of many smaller crystals
mostly <0.5 mm in size. Inclusions of silicates are common,
and of chalcopyrite or rutile rare, along the boundaries between
the smaller crystals. Chalcopyrite forms subhedral crystals
up to 0.1 mm in size that show minor oxidation to limonite
at the edges.
The
protolith for this phyllic (?quartz-clay-sericite-?pyrophyllite-chlorite-pyrite-rutile)
altered, possibly earlier potassic (Kspar-quartz) altered
rock is uncertain, but it looks like a mafic-intermediate
intrusive.
L00-13-249.65:
PHYLLIC (?QUARTZ-CLAY-SERICITE-CHLORITE-PYRITE-RUTILE) AND
POSSIBLY EARLY POTASSIC (KSPAR-QUARTZ) ALTERED ?INTRUSIVE
ROCK
Hand
sample is mottled, creamy-buff and green, medium-grained ?altered
intrusive rock, with a gabbroic appearance somewhat similar
to the sample from 113.70 m. The rock is cut by a darker,
greenish-grey zone about 1 cm thick forming an envelope to
a pyritic fracture. In the etched slab, relict feldspar stains
bright yellow for K-feldspar everywhere but in this envelope,
indicating that the phyllic alteration along it is later than
K-feldspar. Modal mineralogy in polished thin section is approximately:
| Quartz
(largely secondary) |
30%
|
| Clay-sericite,
?pyrophyllite |
30%
|
| K-feldspar
(?secondary) |
25%
|
| Chlorite
|
10%
|
| Pyrite
|
3%
|
| Rutile
|
1%
|
| Chalcopyrite
|
<1%
|
| ?Zircon
|
tr
|
In
thin section, the relict texture of this sample is clearer
than in the previous slides. It consists of relatively large
mafic relics and relict feldspar crystals, surrounded and
attacked by (mainly secondary) quartz; larger quartz crystals
may be ?primary, and there may be areas of fine-grained relict
groundmass (Kspar, quartz) where clay-sericite is not so intense.
Relict
feldspar sites have relatively euhedral rectangular outlines
up to about 1.5 mm long. They are extensively replaced by
fine-grained (5-15 micron) clay-sericite, but retain vestiges
of ?lamellar twinning. Since they now stain yellow in the
etched slab, they likely represent plagioclase that has been
completely replaced by K-feldspar. In places there are also
cubes of pyrite up to 1 mm in diameter found in these sites.
Relict
mafic sites with subhedral outlines up to 3 mm long are pseudomorphed
by chlorite (pale green flakes up to 0.15 mm diameter), clay-sericite
or ?pyrophyllite (radiating flakes to 0.1 mm diameter), plus
minor rutile (dark brown euhedra to 0.2 mm long). They also
contain traces of ?zircon (euhedra to 70 microns), in places
with pleochroic haloes in surrounding chlorite that indicate
the presence of radioactive matter.
Quartz
crystals with ragged outlines up to 2 mm in diameter, overgrown
at the rims by up to 0.25 mm, may be relict primary crystals.
Finer-grained quartz with abundant inclusions that are semi-continuous
with the surrounding or adjacent silicate minerals is likely
secondary.
In
the fracture zone, pyrite forms elongated blebs or aggregates
up to 1 cm long associated with chlorite and clay-sericite.
Minor chalcopyrite occurs as narrow discontinuous rims of
the pyrite crystals or in the adjacent chlorite. The envelope
contains clay-sericite and chlorite, with no K-feldspar remaining,
indicating destruction of earlier-formed Kspar by later phyllic
alteration.
L00-13-263.25:
PHYLLIC OR ?ADVANCED ARGILLIC (QUARTZ-CLAY-SERICITE- ?PYROPHYLLITE-CHLORITE-PYRITE-RUTILE),
?EARLY POTASSIC (KSPAR-QUARTZ) ALTERED ?FELSIC-INTERMEDIATE
INTRUSIVE
Hand
sample is a grey-white, medium- to fine-grained ?felsic to
intermediate intrusive composed of scattered dark green mafic
relics containing disseminated pyrite, in a quartzo-feldspathic
matrix that mostly stains bright yellow for K-feldspar. Modal
mineralogy in polished thin section is approximately:
| K-feldspar
(?primary or secondary) |
45%
|
| Quartz
(partly secondary) |
30%
|
| Clay-sericite,
?pyrophyllite |
15%
|
| Chlorite
|
7%
|
| Pyrite
|
1-2%
|
| Rutile
|
<1%
|
| Apatite,
?zircon |
<1%
|
This
slide consists of intergrown K-feldspar, quartz, clay-sericite
or ?pyrophyllite and minor chlorite, pyrite, and rutile.
K-feldspar
is less clay-sericite altered in this sample; it can be easily
identified, forming subhdral crystals up to 2.5 mm in diameter
that are rarely Carlsbad twinned. They do not show relict
lamellar structure indicating replacement of plagioclase,
but by comparison to other samples in the suite, it is possible
that most of the Kspar is secondary. On the other hand, if
they are not secondary then samples higher up in the hole,
from about 212.0 m down, may share a common primary lithology
containing abundant K-feldspar.
Quartz
forms sub- to anhedral crystals that are optically continuous
for up to 1.5 mm across, but commonly poikilitically enclose
other minerals, indicating they have probably grown by replacement
of adjacent feldspars.
Clay-sericite
mainly forms colourless subhedral flakes up to about 0.1 mm
in diameter partly replacing K-feldspar or pseudomorphing
separate elongate relict shapes up to 1 mm long that may represent
former ?plagioclase. However, in places pale brownish green
radial rosettes up to 0.5 mm in diameter look very much like
?pyrophyllite; microchemical tests would be required to positively
separate these minerals. If pyrophyllite is present, it would
indicate a strongly aluminous alteration assemblage.
Mafic
relics with subhedral outlines up to possibly 2 mm across
are pseudomorphed by pale green chlorite, pyrite, rutile,
and in places the mineral tentatively identified as ?pyrophyllite.
Pyrite occurs as euhedra mostly <1 mm in diameter; rutile
as aggregates up to 0.25 mm across of 25 micron subhedra.
Apatite forms euhedral prisms up to 0.1 mm long; traces of
?zircon form euhedra up to 80 microns long.
This
is a strongly altered rock of phyllic (clay-sericite-chlorite-pyrite-rutile)
and possibly earlier potassic assemblage; if pyrophyllite
is present, it may have been advanced argillic. The protolith
may have been a felsic-intermediate intrusive.
L00-13-280.05:
PHYLLIC OR ?ADVANCED ARGILLIC (QUARTZ-CLAY-SERICITE- ?PYROPHYLLITE-CHLORITE-PYRITE-RUTILE),
?EARLY POTASSIC (KSPAR-QUARTZ) ALTERED ?FELSIC-INTERMEDIATE
INTRUSIVE
Hand
sample is similar to 263.25, containing 20-30% 1-2 mm green
chloritized mafic relics in a cream-coloured quartzo-feldspathic
matrix that stains bright yellow for K-feldspar. Slightly
differing rock types are separated by a pyritic fracture.
Modal mineralogy in polished thin section is approximately:
| K-feldspar
(?primary or secondary) |
40%
|
| Quartz
(partly secondary) |
30%
|
| Clay-sericite
|
20%
|
| Chlorite,
?pyrophyllite |
5%
|
| Pyrite
|
4-5%
|
| Rutile
|
<1%
|
In
thin section, this sample is similar to that described for
263.25 above, except that the K-feldspar is somewhat more
clay-sericite altered than in that sample, and the K-feldspar
looks to be after former plagioclase.
K-feldspar
forms rectangular subhedra up to about 2.5 mm across that
in places contain vaguely seen relict lamellar ?twinning that
suggests it could have replaced former plagioclase.
Quartz
forms a network of irregular to subhedral crystals between
the feldspar crystals that are optically continuous over 1.5
mm but poikilitically enclose other minerals. The quartz is
likely partly primary and partly secondary, having grown outwards
and replaced adjacent minerals during silicification.
Clay-sericite
forms colourless subhedral flakes mainly <50 microns in
diameter, but in places larger aggregates of similar or fibrous
material, rarely with rosette shape, suggest the possibility
of ?pyrophyllite being present. These larger aggregates are
very pale green appear to replace former ?mafic crystals with
subhedral rectangular outlines up to about 1 mm long. In other
places, the mafic relics are pseudomorphed by colourless chlorite
(subhedral flakes <20 microns in diameter) or both chlorite
and ?pyrophyllite plus minor brown rutile forming aggregates
up to 0.15 mm across of 25 micron crystals. Pyrite is also
commonly found in former mafic sites, forming euhedral crystals
or aggregates up to 1.5 mm across.
L00-13-290.55:
INTENSE PHYLLIC (CLAY-SERICITE-CHLORITE-PYRITE-RUTILE), ?EARLY
POTASSIC (QUARTZ-KSPAR) ALTERED AND VEINED ?MAFIC INTRUSIVE
Hand
sample is grey-green, strongly altered ?mafic-intermediate
intrusive rock, cut by a stockwork of planar quartz veins
with diffuse boundaries and containing dark clots of ?chlorite.
Coarse cubic pyrite is loosely associated with the veining.
There is minor reaction to cold dilute HCl; abundant yellow
stain in the etched slab indicates significant K-feldspar,
with lesser (clay-sericitized) ?relict plagioclase etched
white. Modal mineralogy in polished thin section is approximately:
| Quartz
(partly secondary) |
40%
|
| K-feldspar
(?partly secondary) |
20%
|
| Clay-sericite
|
20%
|
| Chlorite
|
15%
|
| Pyrite
|
3-5%
|
| Carbonate
(calcite) |
1-2%
|
| Rutile
|
<1%
|
| Chalcopyrite
|
<1%
|
Significant
alteration and quartz veining has overprinted this rock, partly
obscuring the primary igneous texture. However, it has many
similarities to samples from 221-224 m; it is almost a breccia,
composed of angular altered clasts in a matrix of secondary
quartz.
The
most striking feature of this rock in thin section is the
abundance of quartz, likely largely secondary, both in the
form of veins up to 1 cm thick and as pervasive silicification.
In the veins, quartz forms large sub- to anhedral crystals
up to 0.5 cm across, in places containing clusters of euhedral
dark brown rutile crystals up to 75 microns long. In places,
there is significant chlorite (subhedral flakes to 75 microns)
mixed with the quartz in the vein. Outside the veins, quartz
crystals also have sub- to anhedral outlines with optical
continuity for up to 1.5 mm, but are commonly full of inclusions
of other silicates at or near the margins, indicating significant
overgrowths during silicification.
Remnant
K-feldspar between the quartz overprint forms subhedral crystals
mostly <1.5 mm in size that are strongly altered to clay-sericite
(subhedral flakes up to 0.1 mm) and overprinted by secondary
quartz. Possible relict plagioclase sites with subhedral outlines
of similar size are marked by more abundant sericite and minor
calcite (anhedra to 0.25 mm).
Relict
mafic sites are pseudomorphed by pale green chlorite (subhedral
flakes to 75 microns) and rarely calcite, or in places by
larger sites up to 3 mm across that are mostly replaced by
5-10 micron chlorite, now largely plucked out of the section
during preparation, and minor rutile (subhedra to 50 microns).
Pyrite
forms scattered euhedra up to 2.5 mm diameter with abundant
silicate inclusions indicating overgrowth of the silicate
matrix, as well as finer, disseminated euhedra. Chalcopyrite
is mainly confined to the quartz veins, forming anhedral to
subhedral crystals up to 0.15 mm in diameter.
Chlorite
in the quartz veins with pyrite and minor chalcopyrite suggests
that some chlorite was associated with an ?early potassic
(quartz-Kspar) alteration, prior to phyllic (clay-sericite)
overprinting of a mafic-intermediate intrusive rock.
L00-13-298.75:
INTENSELY ?PROPYLITIC (CHLORITE-MINOR CALCITE-QUARTZ- CHALCOPYRITE-PYRRHOTITE-RUTILE-PYRITE)
ALTERED ?MAFIC IGNEOUS ROCK
Hand
sample is a very dark green, fine-grained, mafic rock that
appears to be composed almost entirely of chlorite (rock is
very easily scratched by steel). It contains significant chalcopyrite
in irregular blebs and lens-like concentrations. The rock
is weakly magnetic and shows minor reaction to cold dilute
HCl (stain for K-feldspar cannot be evaluated due to lack
of an etched slab). Modal mineralogy in polished thin section
is approximately:
| Chlorite
|
85%
|
| Carbonate
(calcite) |
5-7%
|
| Chalcopyrite
|
3-5%
|
| Quartz
(secondary) |
2-3%
|
| Pyrrhotite
|
1-2%
|
| Rutile
|
1%
|
| Pyrite
|
<1%
|
The
bulk of this slide consists of fine-grained, bright green,
strongly pleochroic, length-slow (Fe-rich) chlorite mostly
as subhedral flakes <25 microns in diameter, but in places
up to 0.15 mm in diameter. Although both fine-grained and
coarser-grained chlorite commonly are aggregated in patches
with highly irregular outlines up to about 2 mm across, it
is not clear what these may represent (e.g., ?former mafic
crystals).
In
some locations (mainly near sulfide aggregates) euhedral quartz
is also found up to 1 mm in diameter, and carbonate (probably
mostly calcite) forms subhedra to 0.35 mm across, in places
loosely aggregating to 1.65 mm across. The carbonate could
represent the sites of former mafic crystals with a different
composition from the bulk of the rock.
Rutile
forms small subhedra mostly <45 microns long that in places
form loose aggregates up to 1 mm across, that may represent
the sites of former ?ilmenite crystals in a mafic rock. Rutile
also rarely occurs as euhedra to 0.2 mm in diameter associated
with chalcopyrite and quartz.
Chalcopyrite
occurs as irregular-shaped masses up to 3.5 mm in diameter
that contain inclusions of chlorite, carbonate, and minor
pyrite (sub- to euhedral crystals up to 0.2 mm). Mostly separate
from the chalcopyrite+pyrite, blebs of pyrrhotite up
to 0.25 mm across are composed of small (mostly <40 micron)
subhedra, concentrated in rather irregular, loosely linear
zones up to 0.5 cm wide. Minor pyrite appears to replace parts
of the pyrrhotite concentrations.
Intense
chlorite-minor calcite-quartz-rutile alteration of a very
mafic ?igneous rock of uncertain origin has accompanied significant
chalcopyrite-pyrrhotite-pyrite mineralization. It is not clear
how to classify this alteration (not obviously phyllic or
potassic; possibly best termed propyltic alteration).
L00-13-304.50:
INTENSE PHYLLIC (CLAY-SERICITE-CHLORITE-HYDROBIOTITE-PYRITE-
RUTILE), ?EARLY POTASSIC (KSPAR-QUARTZ) ALTERED ?INTERMEDIATE
INTRUSIVE
Hand
sample shows a hydrothermal breccia composed of greenish-grey,
irregular-shaped fragments up to 3 cm across in a quartz-minor
sulfide matrix of stockwork veins (similar to samples from
221-224 m and 320-324 m). The rock shows minor reaction to
cold dilute HCl, and extensive yellow stain for K-feldspar
in fragments in the etched slab. The distinction between quartz
vein material (clear grey) and the surrounding silicified
envelope (grey-green) is also easy to see in the etched slab.
Modal mineralogy in polished thin section is roughly:
| Quartz
(mainly secondary) |
55%
|
| Clay-sericite
|
20%
|
| K-feldspar
(possibly secondary) |
15%
|
| Chlorite,
hydrobiotite |
5%
|
| Pyrite
|
3-5%
|
| Carbonate
(?mainly calcite) |
1-2%
|
| Chalcopyrite
|
<1%
|
| Rutile
|
<1%
|
Quartz-chlorite-sulfide
veins have crudely planar walls and are up to about 0.5 cm
thick. Quartz crystals are mainly subhedral, up to 4.5 mm
in diameter. Both chlorite and sulfides, mainly pyrite, are
variable in their distribution, generally occurring together
as irregular clotty concentrations up to almost 1 cm across.
Within these concentrations the pyrite forms aggregates of
subhedral crystals mostly <2 mm in diameter, commonly surrounded
by chlorite as flakes up to 0.15 mm in diameter with optical
characteristics as for the previous sample (likely Fe-rich).
Chalcopyrite forms small subhedral crystals up to 0.5 mm across,
associated with vugs filled by chlorite and ?hydrobiotite
or clay-sericite.
In
the immediate wallrock envelope to the veins, quartz forms
subhedral crystals that are optically continuous for up to
almost 2 mm, with strong overgrowth textures at some of the
rims indicating they have grown by replacement of adjacent
minerals, especially feldspars. Feldspar relics have irregular
to subhedral outlines up to about 1.5 mm diameter that are
heavily replaced by clay-sericite (subhedral flakes to 75
microns), secondary quartz (subhedra to 0.2 mm) and minor
chlorite (10-20 micron flakes) and pyrite (euhedral cubes
to 0.5 mm). Staining in the etched slab indicates that most
feldspar is Kspar; rare relict cores that are unstained suggest
the Kspar may be ?secondary, possibly replacing former ?plagioclase.
Mafic
relics have mainly irregular to rarely subhedral outlines
up to 1.5 mm in diameter, pseudomorphed by chlorite (matted
flakes mostly <10 microns in size) plus lesser "hydrobiotite"
(flakes to 0.15 mm like sericite but pale greenish-brown and
pleochroic), quartz (subhedra to 0.2 mm), aggregates of rutile
(to 0.3 mm) and minor clay-sericite. Other larger aggregates
up to 0.5 cm, possibly after ?glomeratic mafic crystals, are
replaced by chlorite, quartz, rutile and minor carbonate (subhedra
to 0.1 mm, likely mostly calcite). Minor pyrite (cubic euhedra
to 1 mm diameter) and chalcopyrite (irregular subhedra in
elongate blebs up to 0.5 mm long) are mainly associated with
chlorite.
The
protolith for this stockworked, phyllic (quartz-clay-sericite-chlorite-hydrobiotite-pyrite-rutile)
and possibly early potassic (Kspar-quartz) altered rock may
have been an intermediate intrusive rock.
L00-13-317.35:
PHYLLIC (CLAY-SERICITE-CHLORITE/HYDROBIOTITE-PYRITE-RUTILE)
ALTERED ?INTERMEDIATE INTRUSIVE ROCK (?DIORITE OR QUARTZ DIORITE)
Hand
sample is a grey-green, fine-grained, massive, pyritic, altered
?intermediate-mafic intrusive rock. The rock is not magnetic
and shows no reaction to cold dilute HCl, and no stain for
K-feldspar in the etched slab. Modal mineralogy in polished
thin section is approximately:
| Quartz
(partly secondary) |
35-40%
|
| Clay-sericite
|
35-40%
|
| Chlorite,
?hydrobiotite |
15-20%
|
| Pyrite
|
10%
|
| Rutile
|
1-2%
|
This
sample is composed mainly of a network of interlocking quartz
crystals that surround and partly replace relict feldspar
and lesser mafic crystals.
Quartz
forms sub- to anhedral crystals up to 1.5 mm in diameter,
commonly with abundant inclusions of sericite near the margins
due to their having overgrown the adjacent minerals. There
are no discrete quartz veins, but a portion of the quartz
is secondary.
Relict
feldspar sites have subhedral but ragged outlines up to about
3 mm in diameter that are now pseudomorphed by clay-sericite,
minor chlorite and pyrite, and attacked at the edges by secondary
quartz. Sericite forms subhedral flakes up to 75 microns in
diameter; possible ?clay is much finer-grained, mostly <5
microns. By comparison to other samples in this suite, which
stain extensively yellow in the etched slab for K-feldspar,
it is likely that the feldspar in this sample was plagioclase.
As such, it may not have undergone ?early K-feldspar alteration,
and be one of the least altered samples in the lower part
of the hole.
Mafic
relics have subhedral to ragged, in places elongate, outlines
up to 2 mm long that are pseudomorphed by chlorite (subhedral
flakes mostly <0.1 mm in diameter; may be some sericite
or hydrobiotite intermixed), some ?clay (5 micron flakes),
minor rutile (aggregates to 0.25 mm across of dark brown euhedra
up to 0.2 mm long), and pyrite (mainly cubic euhedra up to
1.2 mm in diameter that commonly outgrow the size of the mafic
relic).
Note
that there is no chalcopyrite present in this sample, which
may correlate with the lack of quartz veining and possible
absence of ?early K-feldspar alteration. It is not clear how
much of the quartz is secondary; the protolith for this phyllic
(clay-sericite-chlorite-pyrite-rutile) altered sample is likely
a diorite or quartz diorite, possibly originally similar to
the sample from 113.70 m.
L00-13-320.80:INTENSELY
?EARLY POTASSIC (KSPAR-QUARTZ), PHYLLIC (CLAY-SERICITE- CHLORITE-PYRITE-RUTILE)
ALTERED ?INTRUSIVE ROCK
Hand
sample is a pale grey-green, stockworked to brecciated rock
(similar to samples from around 220-224 m and 290-304 m) composed
of subangular fragments up to 2.5 cm in diameter in a hydrothermal
quartz-pyrite-chlorite breccia matrix. The rock is not magnetic
and shows only trace reaction to cold dilute HCl, but there
is extensive yellow stain for K-feldspar in the etched slab.
Modal mineralogy in polished thin section is approximately:
| K-feldspar
(?partly secondary) |
35%
|
| Quartz
(partly secondary) |
30%
|
| Clay-sericite
|
20%
|
| Chlorite
|
5%
|
| Pyrite
|
5%
|
| Carbonate
(partly calcite) |
2-3%
|
| Rutile
|
1-2%
|
| Epidote
|
<1%
|
| ?Zircon
|
tr
|
This
sample is composed mainly of about 15-20% hydrothermal quartz-sulfide+chlorite
veins cutting a strongly altered ?intrusive consisting of
?early secondary K-feldspar and quartz, and relict mafic sites.
Quartz
is abundant and probably largely secondary, forming subhedral
crystals mostly <1 mm in diameter that range from relatively
clear (well crystallized) in the vein stockwork/breccia matrix,
to inclusion-rich at the crystal margins throughout the body
of the rock. It is likely that a signficant proportion of
the latter has grown at the expense of adjacent feldspar crystals
by replacing their margins.
K-feldspar
forms subhedral crystals up to about 3 mm in diameter with
ragged outlines caused by attack at the margins by secondary
quartz and clay-sericite. In some of the larger relics, vague
remnants of polysynthetic twinning suggest that the Kspar
has replaced former ?plagioclase; a few highly sericitized
relics (white, not stained yellow in the etched slab) also
suggest this. Carlsbad twinning is visible in the Kspar crystals;
fine particles of ?clay (<10 microns) and coarser flakes
of sericite (up to 50 microns replace up to about 35% of the
crystals.
Mafic
relics have irregular ragged outlines up to about 1 mm in
diameter, pseudomorphed by chlorite (pale green subhedral
flakes up to 50 microns in diameter), plus minor sericite
of similar size, secondary quartz (euhedra to 0.2 mm), sulfides,
carbonate (likely mostly calcite, subhedra to 0.3 mm diameter),
epidote (subhedra to 0.1 mm long) and traces of ?zircon (euhedra
to 35 microns surrounded by pleochroic haloes in chlorite).
Sulfides
are coarsest and most abundant in the quartz stockwork. Pyrite
forms euhedral to subhedral crystals up to 2 mm in diameter,
rarely with inclusions near the rim of chalcopyrite (subhedra
up to 0.2 mm long). Chalcopyrite also occurs as separate subhedra
to 0.25 mm mostly replacing former mafic crystals and therefore
contained within chlorite and associated with pyrite; or,
more rarely, in quartz of the stockwork.
The
protolith for this intensely ?early potassic (Kspar-quartz),
later phyllic (clay-sericite-chlorite- rutile) altered rock
may have been an intermediate-mafic intrusive like the previous
sample. It is not clear whether the sulfide introduction and
veining accompanied the early potassic or later phyllic alteration.
L00-13-324.60:
INTENSE ?EARLY POTASSIC (KSPAR-QUARTZ-?CHLORITE-SULFIDE) AND
PHYLLIC (CLAY-SERICITE-CARBONATE-?CHLORITE) ALTERED ?INTRUSIVE
ROCK
Hand
sample is a dark green to greyish, brecciated and stockworked
rock similar to the previous sample but more strongly veined
and altered. Fragments of wallrock have angular outlines up
to 2.5 cm long, set in about 40% hydrothermal matrix. Least
altered fragments contain minor white etched ?clay-sericite
altered plagioclase relics, but most altered fragments contain
only quartz and Kspar that stains bright yellow in the etched
slab. Some sulfide blebs are magnetic and there is minor reaction
to cold dilute HCl; modal mineralogy in polished thin section
is approximately:
| Quartz
(largely secondary) |
40%
|
| K-feldspar
(?largely secondary) |
20%
|
| Chlorite
|
15%
|
| Clay-sericite
|
15%
|
| Carbonate
(partly calcite) |
3-5%
|
| Pyrite
|
5-7%
|
| Rutile
|
1-2%
|
The
hydrothermal quartz-pyrite-chorite stockwork or breccia matrix
forms about 30-35% of this sample. Within this matrix, quartz
forms coarse subhedra up to almost 4 mm long; patches of chlorite
of similar dimensions generally surround pyrite. The chlorite
forms bright green euhedral flakes up to 0.15 mm diameter
or <15 microns in diameter. Minor carbonate, likely mostly
calcite, forms subhedral crystals up to 0.5 mm across intergrown
with the chlorite. Pyrite occurs as euhedral to subhedral
crytals up to about 1 mm in diameter, in places forming coarse
aggregates up to 0.5 cm across (finer pyrite occurs in the
walrock fragments).
In
the wallrock fragments, feldspar ranges from nearly fresh
Kspar (subhedra up to 1 mm in diameter) where mixed with secondary
quartz near the margins of the quartz stockwork, to clay-sericite
altered Kspar or ?relict plagioclase (ragged outlines up to
1.5 mm in diameter) in the larger fragments. Mafic relics
have subhedral outlines up to 1 mm long that are pseudomorphed
by chlorite (flakes mostly <50 microns), hydrobiotite (flakes
to 0.1 mm), rutile (aggregates to 0.3 mm of dark brown subhedra
mostly <30 microns in diameter), pyrite (euhedra to 0.25
mm) and in places carbonate (subhedra to 50 microns that appear
to include both calcite and ?dolomite or ankerite, with higher
relief).
The
protolith for this intensely ?early potassic (Kspar-quartz-?chlorite-sulfide)
altered and veined, later phyllic (clay-sericite-carbonate-?chlorite)
altered rock is not clear, but could be similar to either
the ?quartz diorite higher up in the hole (sample 317.35)
or the ?quartz monzonite at 325.60.
L00-13-325.60:
PROPYLITIC (CHLORITE-CLAY-SERICITE-CARBONATE-PYRITE-RUTILE)
ALTERED, SERIATE-TEXTURED QUARTZ MONZONITE
Hand
sample is grey-white, relatively unaltered quartz monzonitic
intrusive rock (composed of pale greenish saussuritized plagioclase,
pink K-feldspar that stains yellow in the etched slab, and
minor grey quartz plus dark green mafics). One narrow pyritic
veinlet crosses the rock. The rock is magnetic and shows minor
reaction to cold dilute HCl; modal mineralogy in polished
thin section is approximately:
| Relict
plagioclase (?albitic) |
30%
|
| K-feldspar
(?mainly primary) |
30%
|
| Quartz
(?mainly primary) |
25%
|
| Chlorite
|
5%
|
| Clay-sericite
(after plagioclase) |
5%
|
| Carbonate
(partly calcite) |
3%
|
| Sphene,
rutile |
1%
|
| Pyrite
|
1%
|
| Chalcopyrite
|
tr
|
| ?Zircon
|
tr
|
This
sample consists of roughly equal proportions of relict plagioclase,
K-feldspar and quartz, with lessser mafic relics. The vein
crossing the slide is composed of quartz, pyrite, carbonate
and chlorite all up to about 0.75 m in diameter. Traces of
chalcopyrite form rare subhedra to 30 microns associated with
the pyrite.
Plagioclase
crystals have a tendency to seriate texture, ranging from
sub-phenocryst size (almost 3 mm long, in places glomeratic)
down to groundmass size (<1 mm). The crystals show the
vague twinning and negative relief compared to quartz typical
of albitized plagioclase, and are mainly 10-25% replaced by
fine clay-sericite (subhedral flakes mostly <25 microns
in diameter) and minor carbonate (subhedra mostly <35 microns
in diameter). In places they are clearly mantled (replaced
around the margins) by K-feldspar, but this could be a late-magmatitc
rather than hydrothermal replacement.
K-feldspar
forms smaller, subhedral crystals mostly <0.5 mm in diameter
mixed with quartz of similar size forming a "groundmass"
although the texture is really more seriate and hypidiomorphic
than porphyritic. The K-feldspar is only rarely altered to
sericite or carbonate.
Quartz
crystals tend to be irregular in shape, up to about 1..5 mm
in diameter, and have a somewhat secondary texture in places,
suggesting ?late-magmatic replacement of adjacent feldspars.
Mafic
relics have irregular outlines up to about 1 mm across that
are pseudomorphed by chlorite (pale green subhedral flakes
to 0.1 mm), lesser carbonate (?calcite, subhedra to 0.2 mm),
sericite (subhedral flakes to 50 microns), pyrite (euhedra
to 0.35 mm) and sphene (subhedra to 50 microns aggregating
to 0.75 mm, containing needles of rutile up to 0.2 mm long,
both commonly hosted in carbonate that could be ?dolomite
or ankerite to judge by the high relief compared to calcite).
This
is a relatively unaltered sample compared to most of the rocks
in this suite; minor alteration is propylitic (saussuritized,
i.e. sericite-carbonate altered, plagioclase and chloritized
mafics). It approximates a quartz monzonite in composition.
Note that since the amount and style of quartz are somewhat
similar to that of quartz in many of the altered rocks higher
up in the hole, it is possible that this could be a protolith
for those samples. However, it appears to be somewhat less
mafic than most of them, suggesting that a diorite or quartz
diorite rather like that from 113.70 m or 317.35 m could also
be a viable protolith.
|