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Genesis of base-metal sulfide deposits, Alabama Piedmont: Final report for the 1985-1986 SOMED (School of Mines and Energy Development) project year

Technical Report ·
OSTI ID:6484871

The best characterized massive sulfide deposit in the Northern Alabama Piedmont is the Stone Hill deposit, one of several small Fe-Cu-Zn deposits and prospects associated with metasedimentary and metavolcanic rocks of the Ashland Supergroup. The Fe-Cu-Zn sulfide mineralization in the Stone Hill district is hosted by thin felsic schist horizons within the Ketchepedrakee amphibolite, along the contact between metasediments of the Mad Indian and Poe Bridge Mountain Groups. Associated lithologies include garnetites, tremolite-chlorite rocks, and oxide facies iron-formations. The mineralized felsic schists and garnetites are of very limited stratigraphic extent, generally occur within the interpreted upper part of the amphibolite, and normally exhibit gradational contacts with enclosing amphibolites. The mineralized felsic schists contain enigmatic grains and polycrystalline aggregates of quartz +- feldspar +- amphibole +- mica that probably represent boudinaged quartz-feldspar segregations, but it is impossible to completely preclude an origin as recrystallized clastic sedimentary particles, recrystallized and deformed igneous phenocrysts, or cataclastic particles. Multivariate statistical analyses and mass balance calculations suggest that the mineralized felsic schists and garnetites are hydrothermally-altered, metamorphosed equivalents of the amphibolites, consistent with the field relationships. Interpretation of the Ketchepedrakee amphibolite as an ocean floor basalt, the mineralized felsic schists and garnetites as hydrothermally-altered variants, and the enclosing graphitic and garnetiferous schists as flysch-type sediments suggests that the rocks of the Stone Hill district were deposited along a rifted continental margin. The close association of mineralization and hydrothermal alteration indicates that a proximal volcanogenic model is most appropriate for the massive sulfide deposits in this area.

Research Organization:
Alabama Univ., University (USA). Dept. of Geology
OSTI ID:
6484871
Report Number(s):
NP-7900688; ON: TI87900688
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English