Gold-Bearing Deposits in North-Central Nevada And: Southwestern Idaho
Gold-Bearing Deposits in North-Central Nevada And: Southwestern Idaho
Gold-Bearing Deposits in North-Central Nevada And: Southwestern Idaho
14-33
Gold-Bearing
Depositsin North-CentralNevadaand
Southwestern Idaho
With a section on
Periods of Plutonism in North-Central Nevada
Abstract
ogy,and geochemistry
of the ore deposits
are avail- TABLE 1. Metallogenic Epochs in Nevada (Ferguson,1929)
able. Some of these new data will be summarized
I Deposits associatedwith intrusive rocks
here with particular emphasison the gold-bearing
A. Jurassicor Cretaceous B. Early Tertiary
depositsin north-centralNevada and southwestern Argentiferous quartz veins Base metals, silver
Idaho (Figs. 1, 4). In this report Roberts is re- and gold
sponsiblefor the geologicframework and sectionon I I Deposits associatedwith volcanic rocks
C. Pre-late Miocene D. Post-late Miocene
replacementdeposits;Roberts and Radtke for the Silver-gold deposits Gold-silver deposits
sectionon disseminated deposits;Coatsfor the sec-
OREGON IDAHO
42 ø 118 ø 117o 116 ø
42. 8lack Can
Mining Districts
1. Disaster
2. National
--81 l-- •McDermitt[ 43. Railroad
44. Rye Patch
3. Gold Basin
4. Mountain City i i
Moun
City y
45. Unionville
46. Lewis
47. Hilltop
5. larbidge
6. Alder
7. Edgemont I i
48. Lee
49. RubyValley
50. Sacramento
8. Aura
9. Charleston
11' Q12 51. SpringValley
10. Island Mtn
HUM OLDT 52. Rochester
11. Rebel Cr ELKO 53. Kennedy
12. ParadiseValley 54. McCoy
13. Lime Mtn
14. Cornucopia
ß-'.-'•ß
i Tuscarora
016 55. Bullion(Tenabo)
55a. Gold Acres
56. Willard
15. Shon
O17 i
o,,Getchel
'@;! idas ß
16. Rock Cr 57. Antelope
17. Awakening 58. lersey
023 59. Cortez
18. Tuscarora
Deeth
19. Midas 60. 8uckhorn
20. Warm Sprs 61. Mineral Hill
21. Dutch Flat 62. Table Mtn
22. Getcheil 410 . _ .024 • 63. Bald Mtn
23. Merfimac 64. White Cloud
24. TenMile Elko 65.Antelope
' 340' ,
25. Winnemucca
26. Bootstrap
33V• ,
I
• I
66. Diamond
67. Shade Run
27. Harmony
28. Golconda
35,,[ 68. 8ernice
69. Ravenswood
29. Iron Point
30. Lynn (Carlin)
31. Haystack 038 ',,, •: ' Mountain 043 ,,,'
70. Mount Hope
71. IXL
72. New Pass
32. Mill City 73. Alpine
33. Gold Run 74. Skookum
34. Maggie Cr
35. Sierra
EKSHIN'G
•
'
'
' /"
' 054
460
¸ 47 ' I '
, , 75. Eureka
76. Granite
77. Wonder
36. Washiki
37. Imlay 56 78. ReeseR (Austin)
38. Willow Cr 057 79. Birch Cr
0
O
O 10-1,000
1,000-10,000
10,000-100,000
• .I"•
,,"',
Town
Paved
highway
Secondary road
Au,
Ag
Sb/ Metallogenic
Hg,
province
boundary
Pb,
Zn
100,000-1,000,000
• U.S.
Highway /'Minor
Ag,
Au
50 MILES
O More
than
1,000,000
(•)State
Highway 0
! I
D A.H 0/.
• / ........ o• • WYOMING
?:.•.•; : C• ,
, J
0%',_.
"'.
Tonopah•pi•h•.
• .
I / Ba.,•._.•in
andRange
ß /C.r
%. i1•_•:
•) '",..,_:•Lo
s•e_
Province
boundary .........
g•• ARIZONA Los
Ve
0 100 200 MILES 0 100 200 MILES
I I I I I I
Tatlock, and Silberling,1960; Wallace, Tatlock, Sil- bodiesappear to be distributedrandomlyin the re-
berling, and Irwin, 1969). Since then, the region gion, othersmay be structurallycontrolled. Thirty-
has been undergoinguplift and erosion. In late one of these plutons have been dated by the
Mesozoictime, block-faulting,accompaniedby igne- K.-Ar method, and their ages are consideredrepre-
ous intrusions and volcanic activity, ushered in a sentativeof the timesof major plutonism.
new regimewhich culminatedin the development of The grouping of ages indicatesthat plutonism
basin-and-rangestructure. The cycle began with occurredduring five periods in the Mesozoic and
the emplacementof intrusive bodies during late Cenozoic(Fig. 4). The oldest group of dates in
Eoceneand early Oligocenetime, followedsoonafter Jurassic (168 to 143 m.y. old), then follow two
by widespreadvolcanismthroughoutOligocene,Mio- Cretaceous groups(105 to 87 and71 to 68 m.y. old,
ceneand Pliocenetime. Block-faulting,which gave respectively),the next group is early Tertiary (40
rise to the presenttopography,was most intensein to 30 m.y. old) and the youngestgroup is late
Plioceneand early Pleistocene time. Tertiary (16 to 10 m.y. old).
Widespread tectonic activity including the em-
Metallogenic Provinces placementof large granitic bodieswest of central
Nevada may be divided into two major metallo- Nevadain the Sierra Nevadais reflectedby the plu-
genic provinces: a western one, characterizedby tons of the two older age groups in north-central
gold, silver, tungsten, mercury, and antimony de- Nevada. The oldestgroup of north-centralNevada
posits; and an eastern province, characterizedby plutonsare the sameage as parts of the Inyo and
lead and zinc depositswith minor silver and gold2 Yosemite intrusive epochs of the Sierra Nevada
(Figs. 1, 5) (Ferguson, 1920; Bateman, 1950; batholithas definedby Everndenand Kistler (1970;
Roberts, 1966). The boundarybetweenthe prov- Fig. 4). The older of the Cretaceousperiods of
incesis gradationaland roughlybisectsnorth-central plutonismin north-centralNevada is about midway
Nevada. Copper, tungsten, and molybdenum de- in age betweenthe Huntington Lake and Cathedral
positsoccurin both provinces. Range Sierran intrusive epochs of Evernden and
The ore depositsof the westernor preciousmetal Kistler (1970; Fig. 4), and a number of plutonic
rocks in the Sierra Nevada batholith have been dated
provinceoccur mostly in eugeosynclinal Paleozoic
and Mesozoicrocks (shale, chert, graywacke,vol- at about 100 m.y. as well. The younger Cretaceous
canicrocks,and minor limestone)and in overlying intrusive rocks in north-centralNevada (70 m.y.
Tertiary rocks. The eugeosynclinal rocks were de- old) correspondin age to early Laramide,as defined
positedon simaticoceaniccrust 5-10 km thick. The by Damonand Mauger (1966). The early Tertiary
ore depositsof the easternor base-metalsprovince (40 to 30 m.y. old) plutonsin north-centralNevada
occur mainly in miogeosynclinalcarbonate rocks are the same age as the start of Tertiary igneous
(limestone, dolomite, and minor shale) that were activityin the Great Basin (McKee and Silberman,
depositedon sialiccrust. 1970a,b). Plutonicrocksof Laramideand middle
The boundarybetweenthe two provincescoincides Tertiary age are not found in the Sierra Nevada,
broadly with the boundarybetweenmajor geosyn- suggesting that the two youngerperiodsof plutonism
clinal trends and with the frontal zone of the Roberts (70 m.y. and 40 to 30 m.y.) in north-centralNevada
are not related to Sierran intrusion but are related
Mountains thrust fault. The nature of these rela-
tionshipsis not clear, but processesrelated to geo- to geologicevents in the eastern Great Basin.
syndinal sedimentationand subsequentorogenyre- Large bodiesof plutonicrocksyoungerthan about
sulted in conversionof the upper mantle under the 30 m.y. old are not known in north-centralNevada,
geosynclineto continental crust with consequent but widespreadvolcanicrocksyoungerthan about 16
magmatismand volcanism during several epochs m.y. old probablyhave deep-seatedplutonic equiv-
(Bateman, 1950; Coatset al., 1965; Roberts, 1968). alents not exposedat the present level of erosion.
This youngergroup (16 to 10 m.y. old) shownin
Periods of Plutonism in North-Central Nevada Table 2 was defined by McKee and Silberman
In north-centralNevada (Fig. 3) there are ap- (1970a) from occurrencesin the SheepCreekMoun-
tain and northern ShoshoneRanges, and is repre-
proximately50 plutonsof coarse-grained equigran-
sentedby basalticandesiteto rhyoliteflowsand dikes.
ular to porphyriticquartz-monzoniteto granodiorite. A swarm of these dikes and flows also occurs in the
These bodies range from about 130 to less than 1
square kilometer in outcroparea. Although many CortezMountainsand RobertsMountains('Fig. 3).
Roberts and Coats consider that the five intrusive
• An exception to this pattern is the Ely district, which epochsin north-central Nevada also represent dis-
contains porphyry copper deposits; the gold content of the
ore is low, but the total productionis significantbecauseof tinct metallogenicepochs,and have so designated
the enormous tonnage of ore treated. them in Table 2. The replacementdepositswere
18 ROBERTS,
RADTKE,
ANDCOATS
Figure 3
118 ø
117' 116'
ELKO
0 10 . •0 80 40 EOMILES
I . I ' I ; i
GOLD-BEARING DEPOSITS IN NEVADA AND IDAHO 19
Note: The age of Grass Valley Pluton (No. 26) should Theprincipalgolddeposits
in north-central
Nevada
read 168 m.y., not 68 m.y. occur in mineral belts that trend northwestward and
FIG. 3. Plutons in north-central Nevada. Modified from northeastward
(Robertsand Lehner,1955; Roberts,
Map 30, Nevada Bureau of Mines by Roland V. Wilson and 1957,1966). The principalnorthwesterly
beltsthat
Richard R. Paul. K-At age and name of pluton listed.
have beenrecognizedare the Lynn-Railroad,Battle
Mountain-Eureka,Getcheil-National,and Lovelock-
formed during the first four of theseepochs;certain Austin; the northeasterly Shoshone-Jarbidgebelt
of the disseminatedgold depositsare also apparently cuts across the northwesterlytrends (Table 3;
associatedwith igneous rocks of the first three Fig. 5).
4 -Gilluly (1967)
6- D. B. Tatlock written
30 -40 68-71 87- 105 143- 16• communication 1970
20-Coatsandothers(1965)
21-Armstrong (1970)
•////
'•\!
22-Armstrong(1970)
27-Armstrong(1970)
-Schilling(1970)
written communication
//
/ \ 5o 6o
/ 70 90 1• 11o 1• 1• 140 150 160 170 i'• MILLION YEAR5
1•0. 4.
20 ROBERTS, RADTKE, AND COATS
Table 3. Mineral belts in north-central Nevada
Lynn-Railroad Paleozoic limestone, Au, Ag, Pb Alinement of windows Roberts and Lehner (1955); Roberts
N. 400-47 ø W. calcareous siltstone intrusive bodies and (1957, 1960); Hardie (1966);
districts; aeromag- Hausen and Kerr (1968); Roberts
netic data et ai. (1967).
Battle Mountain- Paleozoic chert, shale, Au, Ag, Cu Alinement of districts Roberts and Lehner (1955); Nolan,
Eureka limestone; calcareous Pb, Zn and intrusive bodies; Merriam, and Williams (1956);
N. 400-47ø W. conglomerate aeromagneticdata; Nolan (1962); Roberts and Arnold
geochemical data (1965); Roberts dtaZ. (1965);
Shawe (1965); U.S. Geol. Survey
(1968).
Getcheil-National Paleozoic chert, shale, Au, Ag, W Alinement of districts; This paper.
N. 250-30 ø W. limestone; calcareous aeromagnetic data
conglomerate
Lovelock-Austin Paleozoic chert, shale, Ag, Au, Pb, Alinement of districts; Roberts and Lehner (1955); Roberts,
N. 40 ø W. volcanic rocks; limestone W aeromagnetic data (1966); Ross (1953).
Shoshone-Jarbidge Paleozoic chert, shale, Barite, Au Alinement of district, Ketner •n Gilluly and Gates (1965);
N. 40ø E. volcanic rocks; Ag, Hg, W fracture zones, and Roberts (1966); D. R. Shawe (oral
Tertiary volcanic geosynclinal trends commun.,1966); Landwehr (1967).
rocks
The mineral belts have been defined from struc- in the upper plate of the RobertsMountainsthrust
tural, geophysical,
andgeochemicalevidence(Rob- fault, as alongthe Lynn-Railroadand Battle Moun-
erts,1966,p. 57). Structural is bestshown tain-Eureka belts. The northwest trends are con-
evidence
bythestrikingnorthwestward alinementof windows sideredto be of probablePrecambrianage,and may
have developedas a set of fracturesnormalto the
earliernortheast-striking
geosynclinal
trends. Shawe
•moOREGON •7o IDAHO•6o
(1965; U.S. Geol.Survey,1968,p. A30) considers
them to be strike-slipfaults. Geophysical
evidence
includes a series of broad aeromagneticanomalies
that follow a N40øW zone related to stocklike in-
ßtrusive bodies such as those of Lewis, Gold Acres,
and Hilltop districts (Roberts, 1966). Pertinent
geochemical evidenceis the isotopiccomposition of
lead in galenafrom depositsalongthe Battle Moun-
tain-Eurekaand Lynn-Railroadbelts. The ratiosof
leadisotopes of the two beltsare distinctlydifferent,
suggesting that the leadmay havebeenderivedfrom
different mantle sources(Arthur Pierce, oral com-
munication,1963).
The intrusive rocks in north-central Nevada fol-
low at leasttwo tectonictrends (Fig. 3): (1) north-
easterly,parallelto Cordilleran geosyncline trends,
40 ø
and (2) northwesterly, parallelto deep-seated frac-
ture systemswhich controlthe mineralbelts. A
possible
northeasterlyalinement of plutonsof groupI
extends from Austin (27 on Fig. 3) along the
ToiyabeRangeto the FrenchieCreekplutoniccom-
plex (21 onFig. 3); anotherlocalalinement
includes
plutonssouthwest of Greggpluton(2 onFig. 3). A
FIG. 5. Mineral belts in north-centralNevada modified, notablenorthwesterly alinementof plutonsof group
Roberts (1966). IV lies in the Battle Mountain-Eureka mineral belt.
GOLD-BEARING
DEPOSITSIN NEVADA AND IDAHO 21
Table h. Gold-bearing deposits in north-central Nevada and southwestern Idaho
15o
- *i I
•' • [ Stibnite-gold•' veins
Disseminated
golddeposits
* Stibnite-quartz'
(SQ)vein,,• •
(_+argentite,
polybasite,
I • (pyrite,
quartz,gold, • (+pyrite,
minor
galena)• • electrum,
minor cinnabar).
• realgar;
minor
stihnite, (Battle
Mountain)
Estß • • National)
Estßdepth
225-I ' 'i galena)
cinnabar,sphalerite,
(Carlin; Cortez; ]I depth
1,000-5,000
ft •• •• 1,000-B,000
ft
I Peripheral
gold I•
I Gold
deposits Acres)
Estß
depth
•I m••ciArgentite-a
2,000-5,000
depth
ft
1,000-h,000
ft
•c • (AAQ)
veins(_+naumannite,
(Jarbidge; Midas) Estß
? (pyrite,
gold,
argentif- • I •
minor
tellurides
)1 • Argentite-adularia-quartz
I•
I•cerous
BOO-- galena,
(Battle
•1 depth sphalerite,
Mountain)
Est.
B,000-10,000
ft •• Te.
sphalerite,
(TQ), •
trahedrite-quartz
galena,
rhodo-
• (AA)
veins
pyrite,
inpre-Tertiary
galena)
(Silver
•
•
veins (tetrahedrite, gold •
chrosite)
(Gold
Creek;
rocks (_+naumannite,
I • City;Tuscarora)
gold,
Estß
ß I Base
metal replacement
deposits(pyrite, argen-
• ReeseRiver)
2,000-5,000
ft
Estß
depth'•
•
depth
2,000-5,000
ft
•I •ß pyrite,
tiferous'galena,
arseno-
chalcopyrite,
•='• -•1
I• gold)
•1 siderite,
sphalerite,
(Battle
Mountain; I•
• Arsenopyrite-quartz
veins (AQ)
gold, I
(arsenopyrite,
•1 Eureka)
Est.depth
ß ß B,000-10,000
ft -•
• pyrite, galena,
ite) (Battle sphaler-
Mountain)
375-
s1• • Pyrometasomatic deposits
• Estß
depth
B,000-10,000
ft
.• (scheelite,
molybdenite, •
• pyrrhotite, bismuthinite
• arsenopyrite, pyrite,
• galena,chalcopyrite,
• sphalerite; gold in sul-
•50-- • Eureka)
fides)(Battle Mountain;
Estß depth
B,000-10,000
1Mineralassemblages
characteristic of eachgroupshownin parentheses;not all specieslisted are foundin eachdepositß
2Temperature
rangeof pyrometasomatic
deposits
fromRidge(1•6•, p. 1816-17)
B00ø-600øC.,
ParkandMacDiarmid,196•,p. 210.
SRange
of mesothermal
replacement
deposits
andveinsfromRidge(1969,p. 1817);Sawkins
(196•,p. 88B-919);
Roedder and
Creel(1965);Roedder
(1967);Meyer• •. (1969,p. 1•12); Helgeson
andGarrels(1968);Lovering(19•0).
•Rangesof peripheral deposits and low-temperaturestibnite-quartz and stibnite-gold veins using uppermesothermal
and
leptothermal
rangesfromRidge•969, p. 1817);Dickson
andTunell(1969,P. 1690);White(1967);Brow•e (1969).
•Ranges
of veinsin volcanic
rocksfromRidge(1969,p. 1817);near-s•rface
veinsfromWhite(19•5,p. 103-108,1•0-1•1);
White (1967); Browne (1969).
•Temperature
determinations
by U.SßGeolßSurvey
(1970,p. A7)andfromNashandTheodore
(1971),andRadtke(unpub.
dataon
Carlin and Cortez deposits)ß
surfaceore bodiesreflectingstrong oxidation and rocks, volcanic rocks, or both (Ferguson, 1929;
secondary alterationcontainmainlyquartz and illite, Nolan, 1933).
minor carbonatesand iron oxides, plus barite and Gold-bearingsulfideveins cut replacementbodies
extremely fine-grained metallic gold (Radtke and at Eureka and Battle Mountain, Nevada (Hill,
Scheiner,1970). 1915), and South Mountain, Idaho (Sorenson,
Gold Acres deposit.--TheGold Acres depositis 1927). Theseveinscontainrelativelyhigh-temper-
at the edge of the Gold Acres window on the east ature sulfideassemblages similar to thoseof the base-
flank of the Northern ShoshoneRange. From 1935 metal replacementdeposits.
to 1957 the mine yieldedabout2 million tons of ore A minor classof quartzveinsfoundin the older
from which about$10 million in gold was recovered. rocks includes those of massive texture, and with
Since 1961 the mine has been inactive. simple mineralogy,principally pyrite, sphalerite,
The ore depositsat Gold Acres are in the brecci- galena,and tetrahedrite. These veins have been
ated zone of the Roberts Mountains thrust and in found associatedwith many plutons (e.g., Gold
rocks above the thrust which have been cofnplexly Creek, Mountain City) but have not been economi-
broken by younger high-anglefaults. The ore oc- cally mineable.
currencethereforediffers significantlyfrom that of In two areas,veins in granitic plutonshave tex-
the Carlin and Cortez deposits,which are largely tures and mineral compositions suggesting that they
within the lower plate. The thrust zone at Gold are, in part, of later and shallowerorigin than the
Acres contains sheared and brecciated chert and pluton. Theseareasare MountainCity and Austin
shale of the upper plate, as well as fragmentsof (ReeseRiver), Nevada. At MountainCity, hydro-
lower plate limestone; in addition, it also contains thermal alteration of Tertiary volcanic rocks near
dikes of altered felsitic intrusive rock and tactite the gold-silverveins gives indirect evidencefor the
zoneswith podsand veinletsof pyrite,arsenopyrite, relative youth of the gold-silver veins. At Austin,
and a little sphaleriteand galena; accordingto Nevada, veins in the mineralized area, which is
Wrucke and Armbrustmacher (1969) the gold con- areally restricted comparedto the exposuresof the
tent of this materialis low. The quartzmonzonite, pluton of quartz monzonite,are made up largely of
as mentionedabove,has beendatedat 99 m.y. and vein quartz that Ross (1953, p. 58) recognizedas
sericitein thesheared zoneat 94 m.y. (M. L. Silber- beingformed in at leastthree stages. Rossregarded
man, written communication, 1970). Gold quartz chalcedonyand flamboyantquartz, which are areally
veins in the northern part of the Tenabo district restricted, as being possibleassociatesof Tertiary
nearbyare associated with Oligoceneintrusivebodies volcanic rocks which rest on the granitic rocks.
(Silbermanet al., 1969). Robertsbelievesthat the Pyrite is in large part contemporaneous with early
gold metallization at Gold Acresmay be relatedto milky quartz and rhodochrosite, but most other sul-
theseyoungerigneous bodies, andwassuperimposedfides,particularlythe silver.-richones,are relatedto
upon an older pyrometasomatic deposit. a later generationof fine-grainedquartz. The sulfide
Gold-bearingdisseminated ore is erraticallydis- minerals identified (Ross, 1953, p. 56) include
tributedwithinthe thrustzoneand alongfracture galena, sphalerite,chalcopyrite,arsenopyrite,pyr-
zonesand in felsite (Wrucke and Armbrustmacher, argyrite,stephanite, polybasite,enargite,and xantho-
1969). No simplepattern of the distributionof conite.
goldhasbeenworkedout; fragmentsof limestoneof The Austin and Mountain City vein systemsre-
the Roberts Mountains Formation in the thrust zone
semblein sulfidemineralogythe veinsof Silver City,
are of ore grade only where cut by veinsof iron Idaho. At Silver City, however,the veinsmay be
oxide. It thereforeseemsthat controlby fractures traced from the underlyinggranite pluton up into
dominatesover lithologiccontrol. An overall litho- the volcanic rocks.
logic control is neverthelesspossible,becausecom- Stibnite-quartzveins are found in an outer zone
minuted carbonate rock and carbonaceous material in surroundingreplacementdepositsand high-temper-
the thrustzoneare in 'a positionwherethey could atureveinsat Battle Mountain (Robertsand Arnold,
haveinfluenced the precipitation
of goldfrom hydro- 1965). They are alsofoundin the Mount Lewis and
thermal solutions. Hilltop districts(Lawrence,1962, 1963), wherethey
Veins
are associatedwith silver-gold veins that contain
argentite and silver sulfosaltsand are related to in-
Gold-bearingveins in north-central Nevada and trusive rocks of Oligocene age.
southwesternIdaho belongto two major groups, Other classesof veinsrelatedto Tertiary volcanic
thosethat cut only pre-Tertiary rocksand are related rocksare the low-temperatureveinscontainingpyrite,
to the replacementdeposits,and thosethat are re- gold (electrum), argentite,naumannite,pyrargyrite,
latedto volcanicrocksandthatmaycutpre-Tertiary proustite, and other sulfosaltsin a quartz-adularia
28 ROBERTS,
RADTKE,AND COATS
gangue,and the quartz-stibnite-gold
veins (National, naumannite, and silver sulfantimonides. The aver-
Nevada) (Lindgren, 1900; Hewett, 1964; Hewett age Au:Ag ratio was about 1:190 in the Trade
and Radtke, 1967). Dollar-Black Jack vein; the ore averaged0.246
In the followingdiscussion, veinstypicalof the ouncesgold and 47.2 ouncessilverper ton.
principalgroupswill be described;
the highertem- The veins at De Lamar, 4 miles west of Silver
perature veins will be describedfirst. City, are composed mostlyof lameliarquartzwhich
CopperCanyon.--TheSuperiorveinin the Copper cuts late Tertiary rhyolite (Lindgren, 1900; Piper
Canyonundergroundmine yieldedhigh-gradesec- and Laney, 1926, p. 106). The silver ore minerals
ondary copperore on the upper levels and sulfide are principallyargentite,naumannite,
polybasite,
and
ore belowthe 300 level (Roberts,1951; Robertsand related sulfides. Gold occursmainly as electrum.
Arnold, 1965). The ore mineralsincludepyrite, The ore averaged0.15-0.50 ouncesgold and 20-50
pyrrhotite, arsenopyrite,and sphaleritein quartz ouncessilver per ton.
gangue; this assemblageis similar to that in the re- National district.--Gold-silver quartz-adularia
placementbodies. Individual particlesof metallic veinsin the Nationaldistrictyieldedspectacular ores
gold in thesesulfideoresare not abundantevenunder in the period from 1908 to 1920 (Lindgren, 1915;
highmagnifications, and mostof it is probablyfinely Willden, 1964). Ore as rich as $135,000a ton was
disseminated in the sulfides,
especially pyrrhotiteand recorded;muchore wasvaluedat $20 a pound. The
pyrite. In a drill coreat CopperCanyonfree gold veins,which cut volcanicrocksof probableMiocene
was found in a pyrite-amethystine quartz veinlet. age, are mostlybandedand showexcellentradial or
This veinletmay well haveformedlate in the metal- comb structure. The principal sulfide was stibnite,
logeniccycleat a distinctlylower temperaturethan alongwith pyrite, and a little chalcopyrite,arsenopy-
the main ore phase. rite, sphalerite,andl galena; most of the gold and
Peripheralgold-silver deposits
in andnearCopper silver was in electrum, but, in addition, silver was
Canyonare characterizedby pyrite, quartz, and found as cerargyriteand pymrgyrite.
argentiferous galena(Robertsand Arnold,1965,p. farbidge.--TheJarbidgeminingdistrictwas dis-
B32), withminoramounts of sphalerite, arsenopyrite, coveredin 1909, and between 1910 and 1949 pro-
andtellurides. Thesedepositsare mostlyveinscon- ducedabout $10 million in gold and silver. Sub-
taining lenticular shoots of gold-silverore, but stantialproductionendedabout1937,and minorpro-
locallythe ore replacedfavorablebedsadjacentto duction continued through 1948 (Granger et al.,
the veins. The gold contentranged from 0.08 to 1957, p. 84). The silver-goldratio averagedabout
2.80 ouncesper ton and silver from 4 to 55 ounces 3tol.
per ton. All the productionof preciousmetals from the
$tibnite-quartz veinscontaining a little pyrite oc- Jarbidge mining district has come from quartz-
cur in the outerzoneof metallization betweenCop- adularia-bearingveins and lodes in the Tertiary
per Canyonand CopperBasin at the Apex and JarbidgeRhyolite, a thick sequenceof phenocryst-
AntimonyKing mines. These veins do not contain rich rhyolite flows, with minor tuff and weldedtuff.
muchgold,but are listedhereto showtheir placein In the mineralizedarea, narrow horsts of Prospect
the zonal scheme. A pocketof rich silver ore was Mountain(?) Quartzite of Cambrian age appear
minedduringthe early daysat the AntimonyKing, within the rhyolite terrane. The rocks underlying
but theseveinsare normallylow in preciousmetals. the quartzitehavenot beendisclosed by mining,but
Flint district, Idaho.--Gold-bearingveins in the 3 or 4 milesto the southwest, quartziterestsin thrust
Flint district (Fig. 6) are mostlycomposedof mas- contact on Paleozoic limestone (Coats, 1964, p.
sive white quartz, tetrahedrite,and other sulfosalts M21).
with arsenopyrite,pyrite, and chalcopyrite;the ore The age of the mineralizationhas not been deter-
averaged20-30 ouncesgold per ton. Other veins mined directly. Two K-Ar dates on the Jarbidge
in the district are mostly quartz and stibnitewith Rhyolitefrom nearbyareasare 16.8 (Coats, 1964,
tracesof silver; still othersare pyritic quartz veins p. Mll) and 15.4 m.y. (Everndenet al., 1964, p.
and native gold (Piper and Laney, 1926). 194). A samplefrom near the uppermostpart of
The Trade Dollar vein system,a half-mile south- the unconformably overlyingignimbrite(the Cougar
west of Silver City on Florida Mountain, cuts Point WeldedTuff) in the Owyheequadrangleabout
granodioriteon the lower levels,Tertiary basalt on 30 milesto the west, was datedby John Obradovich
intermediate levels, and overlying rhyolite on the as 12.2 m.y. (Coatsand Stephens,1968). The Cou-
upper levels (Lindgren, 1900; Piper and Laney, gar Point postdatesthe mineralization. As the min-
1926, p. 118). The veins are massiveand consist eralization is believed to be closely related to the
of comb quartz, adularia, and a little calcite. The
eruption of the late Miocene(?) JarbidgeRhyolite,
ore mineralsincludepyrite, nativegold, argentite, the mineralizationis alsoprobablylate Miocene.
GOLD-BEARING DEPOSITS IN NEF'ADA AND IDAHO 29
The ore depositsin the rhyolitefollowsteeplydip- 1966. Altered and mineralized rocks are overlain
ping faults,trendinggenerallynorth to northwest;a unconformablyby rhyolite ignimbriteand andesite,
few have northeast trends. The gangue minerals, bothof whichpostdate
mineralization.Coats(1967,
in additionto quartz and adularia,includeearly cal.- p. 1) foundevidencefor the existenceof unexploited
cite (largelyreplaced),barite,fluorite,kaolinite,and parts of veinsbeneaththe later volcanicrocks. The
halloysite;ore minerals includepyrite, gold, argen- age of the mineralizationis not preciselyknown, but
tite, and naumannite(Schrader,1923, p. 50-52; the ignimbrite yielded sanidinethat was dated by
Davidson,1960). J. C. Von Essen (written communication, 1969) at
Mountain City ( Cope).MThe originaldiscoveries 15 m.y.
of silver-goldore in the MountainCity districthave The ore bodiesare sheetedzonesin andesite;they
beenshadedinto obscurityby the later productionof trendeastwardand dip steeplynorthward. Primary
copperore from the Mountain City Copper Com- mineralsare quartz, barite, pyrite, argentite,tetra-
pany's Rio Tinto mine. The copper depositsare hedrite, and possiblypyrargyrite. Comb structure
geneticallyunrelated to the silver-gold deposits is presentin the quartz veins. In places,silicified
(Coats and Shephens,1968). The proportionof countryrock was worked. The maximumgradeof
silverto gold in the bullionproducedfrom the veins mill-run ore reportedto Emmons(1910, p. 64) was
duringthe period1869-1932wasabout230 to 1. 400 ouncessilverper ton. Reworkingof the tailings
The gold and silver depositsof the Mountain City yielded0.13 ouncesof gold and 9 ouncesof silver
mining district are quartz veins,mostlyin a pluton per ton.
that rangesfrom granodioriteto quartzmonzonitein Tuscarora.--The Tuscorora district was discov-
composition.Near the southernmargin of the plu- ered in 1867. Placer gold was mined for a number
ton, veins cut Paleozoicsedimentaryrocks. In the of years,mostlyby Chinese;the total productionwas
centralpart of the pluton,near the town of Mountain about $700,000 (Nolan, 1936, p. 14) The lode
City, veins occur near, but not in, a narrow east- depositswere discoveredin 1871, and the recorded
trendinggrabenof rhyolitic rocks,which are hydro- productionthrough1941 (Granger et al., 1957, p.
thermally altered near the veins. 153) was 128,165 ouncesof gold and 7,138,684
After a long period in which these mines were ouncesof silver, for a silver-gold ratio of about 44
dormant,one, the Protection,was reopenedin 1946 to 1. Productionsince 1941 has been negligible.
and continuedto produceuntil 1948. Total ore pro- The bedrock in the mineralized area consists
duced during this 3-year period is estimatedat 2 chieflyof two types: (1) a beddedseriesof rhyolitic
thousandtons, averagingabout 40 ouncesof silver tuff and interbeddedandesiticflows, and (2) intru-
and three-quartersof an ounceof gold per ton. It siveandesitebodiesof irregular shape(Nolan, 1936,
seemslikely that two different epigenetictypes of p. 14). The beddedseries dips east or southeast
precious-metal depositsare presenthere at Mountain quite regularlybut is cut by many faults,mostlyof
City, oneconsisting of Cretaceouspyriticgold-quartz north to northeasttrend with indeterminatedip and
veins, which have not been mined but have con- displacement.Recentmappinghas shownthat the
tributedgoldto the placers,andthe otherof Tertiary Tuscarora district is boundedon the north by a
silver-goldveins, which have furnishedmost of the narrow horst of Valmy quartziteand chert; no ore
production. Sanidinefrom pumice,in an unaltered bodies seem to have been mined in it.
part of the rhyolitetuffs mentionedabove,was dated The age of the mineralizationat Tuscarorawas
by J. C. Von Essen(written communication, 1969) determinedby a K-Ar date on adularia from the
at 30 m.y. The mineralizationthat is spatiallyas- ModocVein (E. H. McKee, written communication,
sociatedwith the alterationof these rocks may be 1970) as 38 m.y.
any age younger than 30 m.y. Emmons (1910, p. 60) and Nolan (1936, p. 28)
Cornucopia.--Mining operationsat Cornucopiaex- recognizedtwo kinds of ore depositsat Tuscarora,
tendedfrom 1873 to 1882. Old tailingswere re- silver lodes and gold-bearingfracture zones. The
treatedin 1937--40. Total production(Grangeret depositsin the andesiteare relativelynarrow veins
al., 1957,p. 41) was $1,273,000. Silver-goldratio or lodes,thosein the beddedpyroclastics are wide
in the later productionwas68 to 1. Informationon and poorly definedbrecciatedzones. In the gold
the weight ratiosof silver-goldfor the earlier pro- deposits,the weightratio of silverto gold is 4 or 5
duction is unknown. to 1; in the silver lodesit is nearly 150 to 1. Nolan
The mineral depositsare in propylitizedandesite, consideredand rejectedas explanationsfor the dif.-
argillizednearthe veins(Lovering,1949). Primary ferencebothzoningand differentepochsof minerali-
structures in the wallrocks are unclear. Emmons zation; he believed that the lodes and veins in ande-
(1910, p. 64) reportedquartz-porphyryexposedin site were richer in silver because of more effective
the mine workings,but outcropswere not seen in supergene
enrichment,
whilethe silver-bearing
super-
30 ROBERTS,RADTKE,AND COATS
gene solutionswere removed or dissipatedin the (Rott, 1931, p. 16). Some calciteis early, and has
widefracturezonesin thebeddedpyroclastics. How- beenpartly replacedand removedby later vein-form-
ever, the materialminedin the mostsuccessful gold ing solutions. The veins and lodesare relatively
producer,the Dexter, was notablypyritic, where high grade, but narrow, extensive brecciatedzones
fresh (Emmons,1910, p. 61), and it is difficultto are low in grade. The metallicmineralsare pyrite,
understandwhy available silver should not have stromeyerite, and native gold, with tetrahedrite,
beenprecipitatedby this pyrite. Differencesin the proustite, chalcopyrite,and sphalerite much less
chemistryof the wallrockmay be responsible for common.
differencesin the silver-goldratio in the ores. Buckhorn.--The Buckhorn mine northeast of Cor-
The principalganguemineralsare quartz,adularia, tez is in siliceousshaleof Tertiary age which is over-
and calcite;the principalore mineralswere, accord- lain by andesiticflows (Roberts et al., 1964). The
ing to accountssummarizedby Nolan, argentite, workingsexplorean area 650 feet long, 245 feet
stephanite,proustire,pyrargyrite, pyrite, enargite, wide, and 120 feet deep which has yielded 39,024
arsenopyrite,bornite, chalcopyrite,sphalerite,and ouncesgold, 311,278 ouncessilver, and 319 pounds
galena. Secondaryhorn silverand nativesilverwere coppervaluedat $1,109,838. The ore bodyconsisted
common. The textures are simple, at least in the of pyritic siliceousbrecciazones,oxidizedto a depth
very low grade materialthat remains. Crude crusti- of 100 feet, that strike N5øW and dip 75øE; the
ficationand vuggy texturesmay be recognized. andesiteand shale adjacent to the ore were exten-
The grade of ore as mined ranged from $50 to sively argillized. Correlative andesitenear Tenabo
$200 per ton in the early daysof production,but fell hasbeendeterminedby K-Ar methodsto be 16 m.y.
to aslittle as$6 per ton in 1890for onemine (Nolan, old (McKee and Silberman,1970a).
1936, p. 31).
Gold Circle.--TheGold Circle (Midas) district Summary and Conclusions
was discoveredin 1907 (Emmon•s, 1910, p. 48). Gold-bearingdepositsin north-centralNevada be-
Mining essentiallyterminatedin 1942. Production long to three principalgroups:replacementand dis-
statistics
are summarized
by Grangeret al. (1957, p. seminateddepositsand veins which were formed
65). From 1908 to 1949 the Gold Circle district duringfive principalmetallogenicepochs,in the early
produced401,752 tons of ore containing126,726 Mesozoic, late Mesozoic, early Tertiary, and late
ouncesof gold and 1,630,268 ouncesof silver; the Tertiary. The replacementdeposits were mostly
averagegrade of the ore producedwas thus 0.314 formedduring the first four epochs;the disseminated
ouncesgold and 4.60 ouncesof silver per ton; the depositsare thoughtto have formed mostly during
silver-goldweight ratio was 12 to 88. During the the fourth epoch,althoughage data are availablefor
last years of production,the grade fell to about $5 only one deposit,Cortez; and the veins formed dur-
per ton. ing all five epochs.
The rocks in the known mineralized area are en- The replacementdepositsare zonally arranged
tirely Tertiary volcanicrocks. Emmons(1910, p. around intrusive centers: from the center outward
47) mentionedan outcropof shalylimestoneabout are central pyrometasomaticdeposits, outer base
5 milesfrom Midas; this has not beenverified,but metal and associatedgold and silver deposits,and
it suggests that the Midas districtmay be underlain peripheralgold deposits. The disseminated
gold de-
in part by rocksof the easterncarbonateassemblage.positsoccurin a uniqueenvironmentassociated with
The Tertiary volcanicrocks includepremineraliza- the RobertsMountainsthrust. They are character-
tion rhyolite and andesiteand postmineralizationized by low-temperaturemineral assemblagesand
rhyolite ignimbritesof the Cougar Point Welded may be geneticallyrelated to the replacementde-
Tuff, known to be as young as 12.2 m.y. in this posits,but if so,theyformedin coolerzones,possibly
region(CoatsandStephens,
1968,p. 1083). nearer the surface or on the flanks.
The ore depositsare veins, sheeted zones, and Exploratory programs in north.-centralNevada
breccia zones that follow faults in the volcanic rocks.
shouldbe directed towards testing zonesbelow the
These structures strike generally N30 ø to 60øW; disseminateddeposits for potential base-metal re-
the dip ranges from 65øNE to vertical, locally placementdepositsin favorable stratigraphicunits
steeplywest. and structural zones near intrusive centers. The
The age of mineralizationhas recentlybeendeter- major mineral belts are the most favorablezonesin
mined at 15.0 by K-Ar dating of adularia collected which to conduct exploratory programs for base-
by Dan Shawe (R. H. Marvin, written communi- metal depositsas well as disseminated deposits.
cation, 1968). The gold- and silver-bearingveins likewise may
The vein material is principallyquartz and altered be related to replacementor disseminated deposits,
wallrock, with minor amounts of calcite and adularia so favorable stratigraphicand structural zones be-
GOLD-BEARING DEPOSITS IN NEVADA AND IDAHO 31
neath productivevein systemsshouldalso be care- ., and Stephens,E. C., 1968, Mountain City Coppermine,
Elko County, Nevada, in Ridge, J. D., ed., Ore Deposits
fully evaluated by geochemicaland geophysical of the United States, 1933-1967 (Graton-Sales volume),
methods. v. 2: New York, Am. Inst. Mining Metall. Petroleum
Engineers, p. 1074-1101.
Acknowledgments Curtis, J. S., 1884, Silver-lead depositsof Eureka, Nevada:
U.S. Geol. Survey Mon. 7, 200 p.
The writers are indebtedto many operatorsand Damon, P. E., and Mauger, R. L., 1966,Epeirogeny-orogeny
mining companyofficialsin north-central Nevada, viewed from the Basin and Range province: Soc. Mining
Engineers Trans., v. 235, p. 99-112.
especiallyR. B. FuRon,Frank McQuiston,Jr., R. L. Davidson,D. F., 1960,Seleniumin someepithermaldeposits
Akright,5 Mel Essington, Byron Hardie, Robert of antimony, mercury, and silver and gold: U.S. Geol.
Hilander,J. McBeth,and Perry West of Newmont Survey Bull. 1112-A, r•. 1-16.
Mining Corporationand Carlin Gold Mining Com- Dickson, F. W'., and Tunell, George, 1968, Mercury and
antimonydepositsassociatedwith active hot springsin the
pany; and to Dave Blake, Fred Howell, J. B. Mc- WesternUnited States,in Ridge,J. D., ed., Ore Deposits
Carthy,and A. E. Schiellof the Duval Corporation; of the United States, 1933-1967(Graton-Salesvolume),
v. 2: New York, Am. Inst. Mining Metall. Petroleum
and to Don Duncanand C. J. Purdy of the Cortez Engineers, p. 1673-1701.
Gold Company. In addition,geologists of the U.S. Elliott, J. E., and Wells, J. D., 1968,Anomalousconcentra-
GeologicalSurvey, includingT. J. Armbrustmacher, tionsof gold, silver, and other metalsin the Mill Canyon
area, Cortez quadrangle,Eureka and Lander Counties,
J. E. Elliott, J. T. Nash, T. G. Theodore, J. D. Nevada: U.S. Geol. Survey Circ. 606, 8 p.
Wells, and C. T. Wrucke, have furnished valuable Emmons,W. H., 1910,A reconnaissance
of somemining
unpublishedinformation. John Obradovichand J. campsin Elko, Lander, and Eureka Counties,Nevada:
U.S. Geol. Survey Bull. 408, 130 p.
C. Von EssencontributedmanyK-Ar'determinations Erickson,R. L., and Marranzino,A. P., 1961,Hydrogeo-
of intrusive and volcanic rocks. Published informa- chemicalanomalies,Fourmile Canyon, Eureka County,
tion is acknowledged
by citation. D.E. White, C. T. Nevada,in GeologicalSurvey research1961: U.S. Geol.
Survey Prof. Paper 424-B, p. B291-B292.
Wrucke, T. G. Theodore, and H. R. Cornwall re- , .., Oda, Uteana, and Janes,W. W., 1964, Geo-
viewed the manuscript;the authors acknowledge chemicalexplorationnear the Getchellmine, Humboldt
helpful suggestions County,Nevada:U.S. Geol.SurveyBull. 1198-A,p. A1-
and commentsmade by these A26.
men.
, Masursky,Harold, Marranzino,A. P., and Oda,
Uteana, 1961,Geochemical anomaliesin the upperplate
U.S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY, of the Robertsthrustnear Cortez,Nevada,in Geological
MENLO PARK, CALIFORNIA, Surveyresearch1961: U.S. Geol. SurveyProf. Paper
August 21, 1970 424-D, p. D316-D320.
, , , --, and Janes,W. W'., 1964,Geochemical
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