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TANNER, P. W. GEOFF (2014) Structural controls and origin of gold–silver mineralization in the Grampian Terrane of Scotland and Ireland. Geological Magazine, 151 (6) 1072-1094 doi:10.1017/s0016756813001131

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Reference TypeJournal (article/letter/editorial)
TitleStructural controls and origin of gold–silver mineralization in the Grampian Terrane of Scotland and Ireland
JournalGeological Magazine
AuthorsTANNER, P. W. GEOFFAuthor
Year2014 (November)Volume151
Issue6
PublisherCambridge University Press (CUP)
DOIdoi:10.1017/s0016756813001131Search in ResearchGate
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Mindat Ref. ID260890Long-form Identifiermindat:1:5:260890:1
GUID0
Full ReferenceTANNER, P. W. GEOFF (2014) Structural controls and origin of gold–silver mineralization in the Grampian Terrane of Scotland and Ireland. Geological Magazine, 151 (6) 1072-1094 doi:10.1017/s0016756813001131
Plain TextTANNER, P. W. GEOFF (2014) Structural controls and origin of gold–silver mineralization in the Grampian Terrane of Scotland and Ireland. Geological Magazine, 151 (6) 1072-1094 doi:10.1017/s0016756813001131
In(2014, November) Geological Magazine Vol. 151 (6) Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Abstract/NotesAbstractGold-bearing mineral deposits occur over a strike distance of >300 km within the Grampian Terrane of Scotland and Ireland. This terrane consists of Neoproterozoic–Lower Ordovician rocks of the Dalradian Supergroup that were polyphase deformed and metamorphosed during the c. 470 Ma Grampian Orogeny. Sulphide-rich Au–Ag deposits occur in Scotland at Calliachar–Urlar Burn, Tombuie, Tyndrum and Cononish, and in Ireland at Curraghinalt (Omagh), Cavanacaw, Croagh Patrick, Cregganbaun and Bohaun. They are hosted by 0.1–6 m thick quartz veins and have a similar overall mineralogy, including native gold, As, Cu, Fe, Pb and Sn sulphides, with hessite, tetrahedrite and electrum present in the first six localities above. The mineralized quartz veins, which are characterized by open-space textures, crystallized at c. 3–5 km depth in the crust. All of the deposits were structurally controlled and, apart from Curraghinalt, occur within second-order Riedel R, R′ and T fractures resulting from a regional N–S-trending maximum principal stress. These deposits are of Upper Silurian to Lower Devonian (post-Scandian) age, and are inferred to have crystallized from hot, silica-rich metamorphic fluids derived from dehydration reactions at the greenschist/amphibolite-facies boundary. Curraghinalt is an older, Grampian, thrust-related deposit. Plutonic igneous rocks (mainly granitoid) contributed in part to the fluids, which were channelled into major orogen-parallel, strike-slip faults, to be injected by fault-valve pumping into the damage zones and fault breccias of newly formed Riedel fractures. Any residual fluid probably percolated to the ground surface to form Rhynie chert-type hot-springs.


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