Multi-Media Geochemical Exploration in the Critical Zone: A Case Study over the Prairie and Wolf Zn–Pb Deposits, Capricorn Orogen, Western Australia.

Bibliographic Details
Title: Multi-Media Geochemical Exploration in the Critical Zone: A Case Study over the Prairie and Wolf Zn–Pb Deposits, Capricorn Orogen, Western Australia.
Authors: Henne, Anicia, Reid, Nathan, Thorne, Robert L., Spinks, Samuel C., Pinchand, Tenten, White, Alistair
Source: Minerals (2075-163X); Nov2021, Vol. 11 Issue 11, p1174-1174, 1p
Subject Terms: PROSPECTING, HYDROTHERMAL deposits, GEOCHEMISTRY, FAULT zones, GROUNDWATER sampling, PRAIRIES, SILVER
Geographic Terms: WESTERN Australia
Abstract: In this study, we compared traditional lithochemical sample media (soil) with hydrochemical (groundwater), biogeochemical (plant matter of mulga and spinifex), and other near-surface sample media (ferro-manganese crust), in a case study applied to mineral exploration in weathered terrain, through the critical zone at the fault-hosted Prairie and Wolf Zn–Pb (Ag) deposits in Western Australia. We used multi-element geochemistry analyses to spatially identify geochemical anomalies in samples over known mineralization, and investigated metal dispersion processes. In all near-surface sample media, high concentrations of the metals of interest (Zn, Pb, Ag) coincided with samples proximal to the mineralization at depth. However, the lateral dispersion of these elements differed from regional (several km; groundwater) to local (several 100′s of meters; solid sample media) scales. Zinc in spinifex leaves over the Prairie and Wolf deposits exceeded the total concentrations in all other sample media, while the metal concentrations in mulga phyllodes were not as pronounced, except for Ag, which exceeded the concentrations in all other sample media. These observations indicate potential preferential metal-specific uptake by different media. Pathfinder elements in vegetation and groundwater samples also indicated the Prairie Downs fault zone at the regional (groundwater) and local (vegetation) scale, and are, therefore, potentially useful tools to trace fault systems that host structurally controlled, hydrothermal Zn–Pb mineralization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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ISSN:2075163X
DOI:10.3390/min11111174
Published in:Minerals (2075-163X)
Language:English