2007 GSA Denver Annual Meeting (28–31 October 2007)

Paper No. 1
Presentation Time: 8:00 AM

THE MECHANICAL AND FLUID PRESSURE EVOLUTION OF THE ARGO FAULT ZONE, KAMBALDA, WESTERN AUSTRALIA: AN EXAMPLE OF AN ARCHEAN, SHEAR-HOSTED, MESOTHERMAL GOLD SYSTEM


CRAWFORD, Matthew A., Department of Earth and Marine Sciences, The Australian National University, Canberra, 0200, Australia and COX, Stephen F., Department of Earth and Marine Sciences, and Research School of Earth Sciences, The Australian National University, Canberra, 0200, Australia, Stephen.Cox@anu.edu.au

The development of low displacement, moderate to high-angle reverse faults during the formation of the Argo gold deposit involved a four stage evolution of deformation and associated hydrothermal alteration within a tholeiitic gabbro host-rock. Fault zone evolution and Au mineralization was associated with high fluid flux, fault-valve behavior in a stress regime in which the maximum principal stress was approximately east-west and horizontal, and the minimum principal stress was sub-vertical. The fault system developed at approximately 400°C in a transitional brittle-ductile regime. Initial Stage 1 deformation involved ductile shear and the development of potassic (biotite-rich) alteration assemblages and associated reaction-weakening; minor quartz extension veins were formed. Stage 2 is marked by onset of predominantly brittle shear failure, the widespread development of matrix-supported breccias in fault zones, and sodic (albite-carbonate-quartz) alteration styles. Extension veins have limited development. Stage 3 is characterized by a change to quartz-carbonate assemblages in fault-fill veins and breccias, and the widespread development of large extension vein arrays. In Stage 4, ,widespread sub-horizontal quartz-carbonate-biotite extension veins were developed, but shear failure was limited. Failure mode diagrams in pore fluid factor ~ differential stress space are used to illustrate how the structural evolution of the Argo fault system was a response to progressive changes in relative rates of change of pore fluid factor and differential stress during individual fault-valve cycles. High fluid fluxes and rapid rates of recovery of fluid pressures, relative to rates of recovery of shear stress after slip events, have maintained the system at near-lithostatic fluid pressures and very low differential stresses during gold mineralization.