Geology of epithermal silver-gold bulk-mining targets, bodie district, Mono County, California

Nonrenewable Resources
By:  and 

Links

Abstract

The Bodie mining district in Mono County, California, is zoned with a core polymetallic-quartz vein system and silver- and gold-bearing quartz-adularia veins north and south of the core. The veins formed as a result of repeated normal faulting during doming shortly after extrusion of felsic flows and tuffs, and the magmatic-hydrothermal event seems to span at least 2 Ma. Epithermal mineralization accompanied repeated movement of the normal faults, resulting in vein development in the planes of the faults. The veins occur in a very large area of argillic alteration. Individual mineralized structures commonly formed new fracture planes during separate fault movements, with resulting broad zones of veinlets growing in the walls of the major vein-faults. The veinlet swarms have been found to constitute a target estimated at 75,000,000 tons, averaging 0.037 ounce gold per ton. The target is amenable to bulkmining exploitation. The epithermal mineralogy is simple, with electrum being the most important precious metal mineral. The host veins are typical low-sulfide banded epithermal quartz and adularia structures that filled voids created by the faulting. Historical data show that beneficiation of the simple vein mineralogy is very efficient. ?? 1995 Oxford University Press.
Publication type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Title Geology of epithermal silver-gold bulk-mining targets, bodie district, Mono County, California
Series title Nonrenewable Resources
DOI 10.1007/BF02259036
Volume 4
Issue 2
Year Published 1995
Language English
Publisher location Kluwer Academic Publishers
Larger Work Type Article
Larger Work Subtype Journal Article
Larger Work Title Nonrenewable Resources
First page 129
Last page 137
Google Analytic Metrics Metrics page
Additional publication details