2016
DOI: 10.2113/econgeo.111.1.127
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Age and Geologic Setting of Quartz Vein-Hosted Gold Mineralization at Curraghinalt, Northern Ireland: Implications for Genesis and Classification

Abstract: The Caledonian orogenic belt of northern Britain hosts some significant quartz vein-hosted gold deposits. However, as in orogenic belts worldwide, the relationship between gold mineralization and regional tectonics, magmatism, and metamorphism is a matter of debate. This is primarily due to the absence of precise temporal constraints for the mineralization. Here we report high-precision 40 Ar/ 39 Ar and Re-Os ages for the largest known gold deposit at Curraghinalt (2.7 Moz) in Northern Ireland and use these ag… Show more

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Cited by 20 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…Tellurium enrichment in the Curraghinalt deposit, Northern Ireland, suggests a possible granitic source (Rice et al 2016). Comparisons of sulphur isotope compositions in pyrite from ore deposits and the Dalradian metasedimentary rocks suggest variable levels of mixing between magmatic sulphur and sedimentary sulphur (Pattrick et al 1988;Hill et al 2011Hill et al , 2014Graham et al 2017).…”
Section: Models For Mineralisation In the Dalradian Supergroupmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Tellurium enrichment in the Curraghinalt deposit, Northern Ireland, suggests a possible granitic source (Rice et al 2016). Comparisons of sulphur isotope compositions in pyrite from ore deposits and the Dalradian metasedimentary rocks suggest variable levels of mixing between magmatic sulphur and sedimentary sulphur (Pattrick et al 1988;Hill et al 2011Hill et al , 2014Graham et al 2017).…”
Section: Models For Mineralisation In the Dalradian Supergroupmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Quartz-vein-hosted Au–Mo mineralisation of similar age occurs at Curraghinalt in northern Ireland, but there is no known coeval intrusive activity and it is classified as an orogenic Au deposit (Rice et al . 2016).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The timing of the later, low temperature fluid is less certain and could have occurred at any time after the Caledonian. Two distinct fluid types, that must be of significantly different age, have also been recognised in Pb-Zn and Au deposits in the Dalradian rocks of the Grampian Highlands Terrane: Tyndrum in Scotland, for which a magmatic origin is favoured and Curraghinalt, Northern Ireland (Baron and Parnell, 2005;Craw and Chamberlain, 1996;Curtis et al, 1993;Rice et al, 2016;Wilkinson et al, 1999). Lowry et al (1997) proposed that at the secondary fluid represents meteoric water that was heated by the intrusions and mixed with magmatic fluids with precipitation caused by mixing between the two fluids.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%