The Pampe gold deposit (Ghana): Constraints on sulfide evolution during gold mineralization

Stefano Salvi, German Velásquez, John M. Miller, Didier Béziat, Luc Siebenaller, Yan Bourassa

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    24 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    The Ashanti belt, a world-renowned gold producing region in southwest Ghana, has received renewed attention in recent years. Most studies, however, focused on the major deposits situated along the Ashanti shear zone and in the adjacent Tarkwa Basin to the east, neglecting smaller yet important occurrences, such as the Pampe deposit which occurs few kilometers to the west of this shear zone, on the Akropong Trend. Nevertheless, investigating such simpler smaller-scale mineralizing systems is attractive, in that this can help shedding light on the processes that control gold deposition at the regional scale. At Pampe, gold endowment has been estimated at approximately half a million ounces with an average gold grade of 2.8 g/t. The mineralization is related to two sets of quartz veins; a first set (V1), which has a NE trend and is sub-parallel to the main foliation (S1), and a second set (V2), which crosscuts this foliation. The V2 veins have a NNW–SSE trend with local conjugate geometries indicating that they formed during NNW–SSE shortening, which, regionally, is linked to major orogenic gold deposition. Gold mineralization is systematically associated with sulfides, which occur disseminated in the vein walls and in the surrounding host rocks. The ore sulfide paragenesis consists of 1) a first generation of pyrite, which is associated with V1 veins; 2) a second generation of sulfides, consisting of an intergrowth of arsenopyrite and pyrite that crystallized contemporaneously with the formation of the second vein set; 3) a late phase of pyrite growth which occurs as overgrowths on phase-2 sulfides and formed during the waning stages of V2 emplacement. Invisible (sub-microscopic) gold was detected in all sulfide generations by LA-ICP-MS. The analytical profiles for the Au signal are mimicked by those for Pb, Cu, As, Ag, Te, and Bi. Invisible gold is thus interpreted to have precipitated within sulfides in the form of nanoparticles (colloidal gold alloys). Conversely, visible native gold grains were recognized exclusively in association with arsenopyrite from late V2 veins, either as inclusions or, more commonly, at the boundary with other sulfides, as well as in micro-fractures that crosscut the sulfides. Gold precipitation was likely induced by sulfidation of the wall rock during fluid–rock interaction. The Pampe deposit exemplifies the mineralization processes that took place at larger scale in neighboring world-class deposits such as Obuasi, Bogoso and Prestea.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)673-686
    Number of pages14
    JournalOre Geology Reviews
    Volume78
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 1 Oct 2016

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