GOLD
Gold:
Gold is relatively scarce in the earth,
but it occurs in many different kinds of rocks
and in many different geological environments.
Though scarce, gold
is concentrated by geologic processes to form
commercial deposits of two principal types:
lode (primary) deposits and placer (secondary) deposits.
Lode Deposits:
Lode deposits are the targets for the "hardrock"
prospector seeking gold at the site of its deposition
from mineralizing solutions.
Placer Deposits:
Placer deposits represent concentrations of gold derived
from lode deposits by erosion, disintegration or
decomposition of the enclosing rock, and
subsequent concentration by gravity.
MORE about GOLD
Geologists have
proposed various hypotheses to explain the source of
solutions from which mineral constituents are
precipitated in lode deposits.
- One widely accepted hypothesis proposes that
many gold deposits, especially those found in
volcanic
and
sedimentary rocks,
formed from circulating
ground waters driven by heat from bodies of
magma (molten rock)
intruded into the Earth's crust
within about 2 to 5 miles of the surface. Active
geothermal systems, which are exploited in parts
of the United States for natural hot water and steam,
provide a modern analog for these
gold-depositing systems. Most of the water in
geothermal systems originates as rainfall, which
moves downward through fractures and permeable
beds in cooler parts of the crust and is drawn
laterally into areas heated by magma, where it is
driven upward through fractures. As the water is
heated, it dissolves metals from the surrounding rocks.
When the heated waters reach cooler rocks at shallower
depths, metallic minerals precipitate
to form veins or blanket-like ore bodies.
- Another hypothesis suggests that gold-bearing
solutions may be expelled from magma as it cools,
precipitating ore materials as they move into cooler
surrounding rocks. This hypothesis is applied
particularly to gold deposits located in or near
masses of
granitic rock,
which represent solidified
magma.
- A third hypothesis is applied mainly to gold-bearing
veins in
metamorphic rocks
that occur in mountain belts
at continental margins. In the
mountain-building process,
sedimentary and
volcanic rocks
may be deeply buried or thrust under the
edge of the continent, where they are subjected
to high temperatures and pressures resulting in
chemical reactions that change the rocks to
new mineral assemblages
(metamorphism).
This hypothesis
suggests that water is expelled from the rocks
and migrates upwards, precipitating ore materials
as pressures and temperatures decrease. The ore
metals are thought to originate from the rocks
undergoing active metamorphism.
-- Excerpt from:
Harold Kirkemo, William L. Newman, and Roger P. Ashley, Gold:
USGS General Interest Publication
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