Geology of the Broken Hill ore deposit, Broken Hill, NSW
The lead-silver-zinc ore deposit of Broken Hill, New South Wales, is among the great ore deposits of the world because of its size, richness, and continuity. To the end of 194.6, approximately £50,000,000 in dividends had been won from recoverable metals worth £210,500,000 gross contained in 63,800,000 tons of ore. The deposit is a hypothermal deposit of Pre-Cambrian age resulting from the selective replacement of two closely adjacent, tightly and complexly folded stratigraphic rock layers. The original sedimentary rocks of the area now consist of tightly folded sillimanite-garnet gneisses with subordinate thin quartzite beds. These contain numerous folded sills of augen gneiss (granite), amphibolite (gabbro), and pegmatite. Post-folding peridotite, granite and pegmatite occur. Probably after considerable uplift and erosion, thin dykes of diabase (dolerite) were intruded, then pegmatite dykes and silicifying solutions, and finally ore-bearing solutions. The folds of the region are tight; steeply inclined, and extremely complex structures resulting from plastic deformation. Individual minor folds were studied in great detail by a method of axial-plane and axial-line analysis. An angular relationship exists between minor and major folds due to strain under torsional stresses. The regional pitch is flatly south. However, sudden reversals of pitch and divergences of pitch in adjacent folds are common. Second-order folds or folded folds exist. Cutting and offsetting the folds are buckles with vertical axes and crush zones of schisted rocks resulting from post-folding but pre-ore faulting movements. The lode occurs in a belt of attenuation between a wide arch on the west and a wide basin on the east. It consists of ma3sive lead-zinc-sulphide replacement orebodies forming (before erosion) a long continuous, irregular, flat, curving pencil of ore, 2,000 to 3,000 feet high and 300 feet thick. In longitudinal section it describes a flat arc pitching downward at each end. The lead lodes resulted from the selective replacement of two closely adjacent, highly folded, favourable beds. Each lode is distinguishable by its gangue mineralogy and metal ratios. No.3 Lens (the lower) has fluoritic rhodonitic gangue and comparatively high Zn:Pb and Ag:Pb ratios. No. 2 Lens, the upper, has calcitic gangue and comparatively low Zn :Pb and Ag :Pb ratios. At least three zinc lodes, with similar mineralogy, occur at higher stratigraphic horizons at the south end of the field. There is little observable zoning. Ore solutions are believed to have migrated up the regional pitch from the south. Intra-mineralization fracturing helped to localize ore shoots within favourable formations.
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- 1952-01-01T00:00:00
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Role Organisation / Individual Name Details Publisher Bureau of Mineral Resources, Geology and Geophysics
Canberra Author Gustafson, J.K.
1 Author Burrell, H.C.
2 Author Garretty, M.D.
3
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Bulletin
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020
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Bulletin
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geology
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AU-NSW
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Earth Sciences
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Download the Bulletin (pdf)
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pdf
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Australian Government Security ClassificationSystem
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Legacy AGSO BMR Bulletins
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- 2018-04-20T06:09:28
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AU/NZS ISO 19115-1:2014
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ISO 19115-1:2014
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ISO 19115-3
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