STRUCTURAL EVOLUTION OF GOLD-BEARING COBALT-COPPER DEPOSITS OF THE BLACKBIRD MINING DISTRICT, EAST-CENTRAL IDAHO
(1) The Indian Creek subplate is structurally highest, composed of compositionally layered chloritoid-garnet-biotite schist that reached 400-520o C and contains lowest Cl and K2O values. Mineral deposits are in sheared quartz-rich zones and contain relatively low sulfide and high As and Au. (2) The structurally central Blackbird subplate is characterized by bedded biotite phyllite and transposed biotite schist that was metamorphosed at 250-350o C. These rocks are characterized by intermediate Cl and K2O values. Co-Cu sulfides are in layered packages, quartz veins in fold hinge and shear zones, and ductility-contrast durchbewegung zones. Relative proportion of Co:Cu decreases and secondary sulfide mineral increases with greater evidence of metamorphism and deformation. (3) The structurally lowest Haynes-Stellite subplate has the youngest strata. These rocks are gently folded, lower greenschist facies, bedded biotite phyllite having highest Cl and K2O values. These contain high Co:Cu ratio and little evidence of secondary sulfide mineral formation.
Variations in metamorphic character, sulfide mineral paragenesis, and halogen contents in individual structural domains at Blackbird are products both of different mineral deposit origins and of heterogeneous tectonic processes.