RESTORATION OF THE EOCENE LANDSCAPE IN THE CARLIN-JERRITT CANYON MINING DISTRICT: CONSTRAINING DEPTH OF MINERALISATION FOR CARLIN-TYPE AU-DEPOSITS USING LOW-TEMPERATURE APATITE THERMOCHRONOLOGY
One hundred and thirteen samples collected along Miocene horst blocks from the central Carlin trend to Jerritt Canyon yielded a range of Cretaceous to Miocene apatite fission-track (AFT) ages. Samples from areas lacking geological and geophysical evidence of Eocene magmatism or mineralisation mainly have Cretaceous fission-track and (U-Th)/He ages (~140-60Ma). Thermal modelling of the fission-track and (U-Th)/He data suggests these samples had cooled to 30-60°C at rates of 1-9°C/my by the end of the Cretaceous (~60Ma). This episode of cooling probably reflects denudation during the Sevier orogeny. Subsequent thermal histories are constrained by geological evidence that suggests, except for a period of Eocene sedimentation and volcanism from ~42-37Ma, rocks in the Carlin-Jerritt Canyon region have been undergoing continuous exhumation since at least the Cretaceous. Modelled cooling rates decrease from the end of the Cretaceous and by the middle Eocene were <0.5-1.3°C/my, suggesting relatively low rates of denudation with little relief development.
Restoration of the Eocene landscape at the time of Au-mineralization using the thermal modelling of AFT data and assuming a geothermal gradient of 30°C/my, suggest that, in areas adjacent to mineralisation in the northern Carlin trend, the current erosion surface lies ~500-1500m below that developed at 42Ma. Given the observed vertical distribution of mineralisation, this restoration suggests Au-deposits in the north Carlin trend formed over a depth range of 800-2200m below the Eocene surface. Such depths are not inconsistent with minimum trapping pressures estimated from main ore-stage fluid inclusions if the fluids had <2mol% CO2 and/or there were minor levels of fluid overpressuring.