Controls on ore deposition in the Lamotte Sandstone, Goose Creek mine, Indian Creek subdistrict, southeast Missouri

The Indian Creek subdistrict is the northernmost mineralized area in the Southeast Missouri district and is unique because ore-grade concentrations of sulfides occur within the Lamotte Sandstone. The Lamotte Sandstone-hosted Goose Creek mine is located on the northern end and the Bonneterre Dolomite...

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Main Author: Gutierrez, Gay Nell, 1955-
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2152/20448
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spelling ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-204482015-09-20T17:14:54ZControls on ore deposition in the Lamotte Sandstone, Goose Creek mine, Indian Creek subdistrict, southeast MissouriLamotte Sandstone, Goose Creek Mine, Indian Creek subdistrict, southeast MissouriGutierrez, Gay Nell, 1955-Ore deposits--MissouriSandstone--MissouriSedimentation and deposition--MissouriGeology--MissouriThe Indian Creek subdistrict is the northernmost mineralized area in the Southeast Missouri district and is unique because ore-grade concentrations of sulfides occur within the Lamotte Sandstone. The Lamotte Sandstone-hosted Goose Creek mine is located on the northern end and the Bonneterre Dolomite-hosted Indian Creek mine on the northwestern side of a N30°E-trending, Precambrian rhyolite ridge. A saddle on the northern end of the ridge separates the Indian Creek subdistrict from another probable high along the same trend to the north. Lamotte deposition was influenced by pre-Lamotte basement topography, and local thickness ranges from 0 where it pinches out against the ridge to over 100 ft toward the basin. It is comprised of a thin, discontinuous basal cobble conglomerate overlain by a medium-grained, moderately to poorly sorted, well-rounded quanzarenite. Fourteen authigenic minerals, plus hydrocarbons cement the Lamotte Sandstone at Goose Creek in the following paragenetic sequence: dolomite - framboidal pyrite - marcasite - cuboctahedral pyrite - bravoite - bladed marcasite - pyrite - quartz dissolution - brecciation - siegenite - marcasite - dolomite - brecciation - chalcopyrite - quartz dissolution - sphalerite - galena (cuboctahedral) - quartz - galena (cubic) - dolomite - gypsum - hydrocarbon - kaolinite - illite - calcite - hydrocarbon. Primary and secondary porosity in the Lamotte vary between 1 and 20 volume percent and authigenic cements account for up to 35 volume percent of the sandstone. Quartz overgrowths are the most common cement in the Lamotte Sandstone at Goose Creek, comprising from 1 to 11 volume percent of the rock. Galena is the most abundant sulfide and commonly occurs in 1 to 3 mm blebs, averaging 3-4 volume percent. Chalcopyrite averages 0.5 volume percent, but high grade concentrations reach 8-10 volume percent locally. Sulfides in the Lamotte Sandstone in the Indian Creek subdistrict commonly occur within 40 ft of the Bonneterre-Lamotte contact, with the highest concentrations within 20 ft or less of the contact. Structure maps of the lead- and copper- bearing-zones mimic the basement topography, suggesting that the Precambrian basement was the major controlling factor on ore deposition in the Indian Creek subdistrict. Vertical tubes of sulfides, which cross-cut bedding near the Lamotte pinchout in the Goose Creek mine, suggest that the ore-bearing fluids moved through the sandstone aquifer until the pinchout forced them into the overlying Bonneterre. There the fluids were channeled through the grainstone-algal reef complex along the N30°E-trending Precambrian ridge. Limited fluid inclusion data for Bonneterre-hosted sphalerite indicate that the mineralizing fluid was a Na-Ca-Cl brine with temperatures between 105 and 120° C.text2013-06-27T15:41:54Z2013-06-27T15:41:54Z1987-082013-06-27electronichttp://hdl.handle.net/2152/20448engCopyright is held by the author. Presentation of this material on the Libraries' web site by University Libraries, The University of Texas at Austin was made possible under a limited license grant from the author who has retained all copyrights in the works.
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Ore deposits--Missouri
Sandstone--Missouri
Sedimentation and deposition--Missouri
Geology--Missouri
spellingShingle Ore deposits--Missouri
Sandstone--Missouri
Sedimentation and deposition--Missouri
Geology--Missouri
Gutierrez, Gay Nell, 1955-
Controls on ore deposition in the Lamotte Sandstone, Goose Creek mine, Indian Creek subdistrict, southeast Missouri
description The Indian Creek subdistrict is the northernmost mineralized area in the Southeast Missouri district and is unique because ore-grade concentrations of sulfides occur within the Lamotte Sandstone. The Lamotte Sandstone-hosted Goose Creek mine is located on the northern end and the Bonneterre Dolomite-hosted Indian Creek mine on the northwestern side of a N30°E-trending, Precambrian rhyolite ridge. A saddle on the northern end of the ridge separates the Indian Creek subdistrict from another probable high along the same trend to the north. Lamotte deposition was influenced by pre-Lamotte basement topography, and local thickness ranges from 0 where it pinches out against the ridge to over 100 ft toward the basin. It is comprised of a thin, discontinuous basal cobble conglomerate overlain by a medium-grained, moderately to poorly sorted, well-rounded quanzarenite. Fourteen authigenic minerals, plus hydrocarbons cement the Lamotte Sandstone at Goose Creek in the following paragenetic sequence: dolomite - framboidal pyrite - marcasite - cuboctahedral pyrite - bravoite - bladed marcasite - pyrite - quartz dissolution - brecciation - siegenite - marcasite - dolomite - brecciation - chalcopyrite - quartz dissolution - sphalerite - galena (cuboctahedral) - quartz - galena (cubic) - dolomite - gypsum - hydrocarbon - kaolinite - illite - calcite - hydrocarbon. Primary and secondary porosity in the Lamotte vary between 1 and 20 volume percent and authigenic cements account for up to 35 volume percent of the sandstone. Quartz overgrowths are the most common cement in the Lamotte Sandstone at Goose Creek, comprising from 1 to 11 volume percent of the rock. Galena is the most abundant sulfide and commonly occurs in 1 to 3 mm blebs, averaging 3-4 volume percent. Chalcopyrite averages 0.5 volume percent, but high grade concentrations reach 8-10 volume percent locally. Sulfides in the Lamotte Sandstone in the Indian Creek subdistrict commonly occur within 40 ft of the Bonneterre-Lamotte contact, with the highest concentrations within 20 ft or less of the contact. Structure maps of the lead- and copper- bearing-zones mimic the basement topography, suggesting that the Precambrian basement was the major controlling factor on ore deposition in the Indian Creek subdistrict. Vertical tubes of sulfides, which cross-cut bedding near the Lamotte pinchout in the Goose Creek mine, suggest that the ore-bearing fluids moved through the sandstone aquifer until the pinchout forced them into the overlying Bonneterre. There the fluids were channeled through the grainstone-algal reef complex along the N30°E-trending Precambrian ridge. Limited fluid inclusion data for Bonneterre-hosted sphalerite indicate that the mineralizing fluid was a Na-Ca-Cl brine with temperatures between 105 and 120° C. === text
author Gutierrez, Gay Nell, 1955-
author_facet Gutierrez, Gay Nell, 1955-
author_sort Gutierrez, Gay Nell, 1955-
title Controls on ore deposition in the Lamotte Sandstone, Goose Creek mine, Indian Creek subdistrict, southeast Missouri
title_short Controls on ore deposition in the Lamotte Sandstone, Goose Creek mine, Indian Creek subdistrict, southeast Missouri
title_full Controls on ore deposition in the Lamotte Sandstone, Goose Creek mine, Indian Creek subdistrict, southeast Missouri
title_fullStr Controls on ore deposition in the Lamotte Sandstone, Goose Creek mine, Indian Creek subdistrict, southeast Missouri
title_full_unstemmed Controls on ore deposition in the Lamotte Sandstone, Goose Creek mine, Indian Creek subdistrict, southeast Missouri
title_sort controls on ore deposition in the lamotte sandstone, goose creek mine, indian creek subdistrict, southeast missouri
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/2152/20448
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AT gutierrezgaynell1955 lamottesandstonegoosecreekmineindiancreeksubdistrictsoutheastmissouri
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