West Detour

West Detour


Phase: Development
Mine Type: Pit

Tags: actinolite amphibolite argillite biotite breccia chalcopyrite chert chlorite diabase dyke gabbro gneiss green schists greenstone belt greywacke mylonite pyrrhotite silicification stockwork talc tonalit tourmaline tremolite visible gold

Gold Map

The Detour Lake deposit and the West-North Detour deposit, are a single mineral deposit. Description, maps, sections, resources and reserves see in the section Detour Lake.

Regional geology: Abitibi greenstone belt

Abitibi greenstone belt of the Superior province of the Canadian Shield. The area consists mostly of felsic to mafic volcanic rocks of Archean age together with related dioritic sills which are concordant to the regional rock formations. These volcanic and intrusive rocks have generally been metamorphosed to the greenschist facies.

The Superior Province is the largest exposed Archean craton in the world and hosts several world class gold deposits. It has yielded nearly 300 million ounces of gold from hundreds of deposits since the beginning of the twentieth century. One prominent characteristic of all significant gold deposits in the Superior Province is their occurrence within or immediately adjacent to greenstone belts. Another characteristic is their occurrence within major tectonic zones which comprise a series of shear zones (Colvine et al., 1988). The Superior Province is divided into four major subprovince types (Card and Ciesielski, 1986): volcano-plutonic, plutonic, metasedimentary, and high metamorphic grade gneiss. The boundaries of these subprovinces are either major dextral, transcurrent, east-striking faults, or zones of structural and metamorphic transition.

The greenstone belts which host the gold deposits occur as east-north-easterly trending ribbon domains in the volcano-plutonic terrains. They typically consist of mafic to ultramafic and felsic metavolcanic …

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