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Proterozoic zircon dates from auriferous zones at the Island Gold deposit: implications for late gold remobilization in the Superior Province

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Date

2024-02-13

Authors

Gagnon, Sophie Marie

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Publisher

University of Waterloo

Abstract

The Island Gold deposit is a high-grade Archean orogenic gold deposit within the Michipicoten greenstone belt of the Superior Province. Hosted within the ~2750 Ma felsic to intermediate Wawa metavolcanic assemblage, gold mineralization has been constrained to between ~2680 and 2673 Ma. However, anomalous Proterozoic ages have been discovered within auriferous alteration zones, suggesting that late hydrothermal activity may have affected the deposit and potentially remobilized gold. Mineralization is hosted within quartz (± carbonate) veins, with minimal mineralization within the surrounding altered host rock. To investigate the occurrence and spatial distribution of these anomalous young ages within the deposit, samples along an alteration gradient (weakly to strongly altered) adjacent to auriferous quartz ± carbonate veins, and from differing depths within the ore zone were examined. U–Pb LA-ICP-MS analyses of zircon from strongly altered auriferous zones yielded Archean protolith dates as well as Mesoproterozoic and early Paleozoic to late Mesozoic dates. Compared to Archean zircons in the host metavolcanic rocks, the younger zircons have generally higher concentrations of heavy rare earth elements and moderate enrichment in Y, Ta, U, and Th. We interpret the Mesoproterozoic ages to represent fluid–rock interaction during the Mid-Continent Rift, whereas the Paleozoic to Mesozoic grouping may be related to alkalic/kimberlitic activity within the area associated with the Great Meteor Hotspot track. It is unclear if these fluids had compositions amenable for large-scale gold mobilization, but they may have played a role in locally distributing gold throughout the Island Gold deposit. An increasing number of reported Proterozoic dates from accessory minerals in Archean gold deposits suggests that post-Archean processes are a potential complication for understanding the distribution of gold and has regional implications for gold exploration in the Superior Province.

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Keywords

orogenic gold, Archean, gold remobilization, fluid alteration

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