NQM north queensland metals limited

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    James Cook University SEG Student Chapter Field Trip Report
    STOMP fieldtrip to North East Queensland

    th th

    September 7-11, 2005

    The JCU student chapter of the SEG
    ran a fieldtrip to the mining districts of
    northeast Queensland in conjunction
    with the Structure, Tectonics and Ore
    Mineralizing Processes (STOMP)
    conference held in Townsville,
    September 2005. The field trip visited
    historic mining regions and current
    ventures to develop a picture of base
    metal mining in the region. We aimed
    to provide access to new geological
    experiences, regional expertise and
    mentors at a low cost while promoting
    living, studying and working in north
    Queensland.

    Four members of the JCU SEG student
    chapter (James Austin, Louise Fisher,
    Julie Graham and Chan Park) and two
    conference visitors (Chris Chambers,
    an exploration geologist with Newcrest


    and Stephanie Maes, a PhD student
    from the University of Wisconsin-

    Map of NE Queensland showing the field

    Madison) took part in the field trip.

    trip route, major deposits and areas visited.

    Northeast Queensland is host to some of the major gold and base metal mines of Eastern
    Australia. There is significant diversity in terms of geological age and mineralisation
    styles (Morrison and Beams, 1995). On this trip we would visit gold, zinc, lead and
    copper mining operations from porphyry, skarn, VHMS and sheeted vein deposits.

    The first day of the field trip focused on gold mining in the historic Drummond Basin
    region. Leaving Townsville in the early morning we drove to the Far Fanning mine. Far
    Fanning is a 1.6 Mt gold deposit with grades estimated at 2.86 g/t. Early mining is
    documented from 1866, peaking between 1895 and 1908. More recently open pit mining
    was carried out during the 1980’s with limited underground mining afterwards. The
    deposit is hosted within sediments which dip to the south and are cut by variably
    porphyritic andesitic dykes and sills. Mineralisation comprises multiple generations of
    auriferous quartz veins with or without pyrite, chalcopyrite, sphalerite, calcite and K-
    feldspar (Dunham and Skrzecynski, 1990). Veining is principally hosted within quartz
    arenite and alteration haloes of sericite, chlorite and silica are observed. We were given


    an introduction to the mine and a tour
    of the underground workings by
    consultant mine engineer Ross
    Thomas and current mine owner Pat
    Williams.

    Leaving Far Fanning we stopped for
    lunch in the historic Gold Rush town
    of Charters Towers. Our second stop
    for the day was a visit to the current
    mining operation in the area, run by
    Citigold Corporation Limited.
    Charters Towers Gold Mines
    exploration manager, Jim Morrison,
    gave us an overview of past and
    present gold mining in the region.
    The auriferous veins in the Charters Towers Goldfield are classic examples of
    mesothermal gold deposits (Kreuzer, 2002). Historical production from the area
    exceeded 6.5 Moz Au.

    After a tour of the processing plant we drove to the site of the new decline into the
    Warrior East deposit which starts from the old Washington mine pit. We were both
    amused and impressed by the sight of a family of ducks in the water at the base of the pit
    -evidence of a well remediated mine site. We finished the day with a look at the core
    from Kidston mine -which we would visit the following day -before driving to the
    historic mining site of Towers Hill to watch the sunset.

    Leaving Charters Towers we drove north to our
    first stop for the day; Kagara Zinc’s Dry River
    Exploration camp. Exploration geologists Geoff
    Hodgson and Mike Barr gave us a really good
    introduction to the region and deposit geology.
    The Balcooma metamorphic belt of northeastern
    Queensland, Australia, hosts three Volcanic-
    hosted Massive Sulphide (VHMS) deposits;
    Balcooma, Surveyor and Dry River South. The
    Balcooma area lies in the eastern part of the
    Proterozoic Georgetown Inlier in northern
    Queensland (Withnall et al, 1991) and is bounded
    to the east by the Palaeozoic Broken River
    Province.

    The Balcooma VHMS deposit is the largest of
    three deposits in the Balcooma Metavolcanics.
    The deposit was discovered in 1978.
    Mineralisation is hosted by metapelite at the

    Citigold’s Jim Morrison leads a tour of
    processing plant at ‘Black Jack’


    Close-examination of chalcocite
    in the Balcooma North open pit

    contact of two different meta-arenite
    sequences. At least three distinct
    mineralized ‘horizons’, two Zn-Pb
    and one Cu, are present. The Cu
    horizon contains massive magnetite

    and pyrite-chalcopyrite within an
    envelope of variably chloritised
    staurolite-bearing metapelite

    adjacent to a folded quartz-feldspar
    porphyry body. The Zn-Pb horizons
    in the metapelite sequence consist of
    massive sphalerite-galena-pyritechalcopyrite
    within lenses of
    quartzite and siliceous
    metasediments (possibly originally
    siliceous exhalative sediments).
    Associated alteration type is quartz-
    muscovite schist (Huston et al,
    1992).

    The region has been an exploration target for over 30 years but it was only after Kagara
    purchased the tenements, coincident with a rise in zinc prices and the opening of a zinc
    refinery in Townsville that mining operations commenced. The Surveyor deposit was
    mined by open pitting, yielding a resource of ~600,000 tonnes at 16.4% Zn. Mining has
    also commenced at the Balcooma deposit with a second pit planned at Balcooma North.
    Underground mining is planned once supergene ore has been removed. A decline from
    the Surveyor pit to the Dry River South deposit had just reached the ore level.

    After lunch, generously provided by Kagara Zinc, we examined core from all three
    deposits before taking a trip to the Balcooma Pit and ROM pad where we collected
    samples.

    Kagara exploration geologist Mike Barr
    explains the mine-scale geology of the
    Balcooma North Lead-Zinc deposit


    Trip Leader, Julie Graham explains the
    regional geology of the Kidston area.


    Our second stop and base for the
    evening was at the Oaks Rush camp,
    formerly the mine camp for the
    Kidston mine. We drove out to the
    two pits that comprised the former
    mine (it ceased operation after 17
    years in 2001). The stockwork
    veining that hosted the gold could be
    clearly observed in the far wall of the
    pit.

    Driving back to the camp we came
    across an old Stamping Battery, which
    had operated from 1909 to 1948.


    Leaving Oaks Rush we continued on our drive
    north, reaching Kagara Zinc’s Mount Garnet
    Mine in time for lunch (again generously
    provided by Kagara). Mine geologist Andrew
    Beaton gave us an introduction to the deposit – a
    Zn-Cu deposit hosted by a garnet, pyroxene and
    magnetite dominated skarn (Beaton, 2004). The
    skarn formed by metasomatic replacement of a
    marble lens on the faulted contact between
    Precambrian mylonites and arkosic sediments
    (Butera, 2001). We were given a tour of the pit

    Kagara mine geologist, Andrew

    and were able to obtain samples containing

    Beaton explains mineralisation

    crinoid stems that had been replaced by sulphides.

    textures of the Mount Garnet

    Our visit finished with a tour of the processing

    Zinc-Copper deposit

    plant.

    In the late afternoon we drove out of town in search of a waterhole in which to escape the
    heat. What we found, however, was the rusted but majestic remains of a tin dredge
    sitting in a dry river bed – yet another part of the regions mining history. We spent the
    night in Mt Garnet and drove the next day to our final destination – Chillagoe, where we
    visited Kagara Zinc’s core yard. After an introduction to regional geology by exploration
    geologist Charlie Georges we examined core from various Au-Cu-Zn skarn resources
    including the Mungana, Monte Vedeo and King Vol prospects.

    Later in the afternoon we visited the Muldiva Cu-Zn gossan and historical workings and
    the Au-Pb-Ag Eclipse breccia pipe. We stopped at the open pit of the Red Dome Cu-Au


    mine (which produced 12.8Mt @ ~2g/t Au and
    0.5% Cu in the ten years to June 1996 (Nethery and
    Barr, 1998)) and also looked at historical workings
    at the Girofla deposit and Lady Jane breccia pipe.
    Our final stop for the day was to gain an overview
    of the Mungana resource drilling program. The Red
    Dome and Mungana deposits and associated
    alteration have been described at ‘telescoped’
    overprinting systems, from VMS to epithermal in
    style. It has been proposed that all the deposits in
    the region may have been part of a single porphyry
    system at the time of gold deposition and later
    offset by strike-slip faulting (Nethery and Barr,
    1998).

    Over the course of the field trip we gained an
    insight not only into the geology of the region but
    into the economics that make one prospect viable
    and others not. We also developed an
    understanding of the historical and continuing role

    Smelter ruins near Chillagoe

    of mining in the communities that we visited.


    Acknowledments

    Thanks go to all the geologists and mining companies for giving us access to their sites
    and knowledge and particularly to Kagara Zinc for hosting us on three successive days
    and for providing lunch! The SEG provided funding of $500 allowing us to significantly
    reduce the cost to students.

    References

    Beaton, A., 2004. Development of the Mount Garnet zinc project from mineral
    resource to concentrate production. NQEM 2004 Symposium, Townsville, May 2004 –
    AIG Bulletin No. 40. pp. 41-46

    Butera, K., 2001. The evolution of the Mount Garnet Zn-Cu skarn, North
    Queensland. Unpublished Honours Thesis, James Cook University.

    Dunham, P.B. and Skrzecynski, R.H., 1990. Far Fanning gold deposit. In
    Hughes, F.E ed. Geology of the Mineral Deposits of Australia and Papua New Guinea,
    pp. 1467-1470. Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy; Melbourne.

    Huston, D.L., Taylor, T., Fabray, J. and Patterson, D.J., 1992. A comparison of
    the geology and mineralization of the Balcooma and Dry River South volcanic-hosted
    massive sulfide deposits, Northern Queensland. Economic Geology, 87, pp. 785-811.

    Kreuzer, O.P., 2002. A structural analysis of auriferous veins in the Charters
    Towers Goldfield, northeast Queensland. Deformation, fluid flow and mineralisation
    (Rick Sibson Symposium), pp. 19-26.

    Morrison, G.W. and Beams, S.D., 1995. Geological setting and mineralisation
    style of ore deposits of Northeast Queensland. In Beams, S.D., ed. Mineral Deposits of
    Northeast Queensland: Geology and Geochemistry. EGRU contribution 52, pp. 1-32.
    James Cook University.

    Nethery, J.E. and Barr, M.J., 1998. Red Dome and Mungana gold-silver-copperlead-
    zinc deposits. In Berkman, D.A. and Mackenzie, D.H. eds. Geology of Australian
    and Papua New Guinean Mineral Deposits pp. 723-728. Australasian Institute of Mining
    and Metallurgy; Melbourne.

    Withnall, I.W., Black, L.P. and Harvey, K.J., 1991. Geology and Geochronology
    of the Balcooma area: Part of an early Palaeozoic magmatic belt in North Queensland.
    Australian Journal of Earth Sciences, 38, pp. 15-29.



 
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