Maatt Grimshaw gained a NERC CASE award to study the placer lode gold relationships in the Klondike goldfield
Matt
Grimshaw has secured a NERC CASE award
studentship. Matt will work on a project sponsored by Klondike Gold Corporation
which aims to use information from placer gold grains to interpret the nature
the atypical small, rich hydrothermal gold system which was the source of the
spectacularly rich placers of Eldorado and Bonanza Creeks, Yukon. Previous work
on the Lone Star Deposit (Chapman et al. 2010 Economic Geology) suggested that the
placer gold was derived from a spatially zoned system in which the systematic
change of gold particle mineralogy reflected both spatial and temporal
evolution of the hydrothermal system. Matt’s work will develop this hypothesis
by correlating gold grains derived from different aged gravels within the
placer systems to their original specific source locations. This approach has
been made possible by discoveries made during Rob Lowther’s study of the White
Channel Gravels (WCG) of the Klondike District. Rob and his co-supervisor (Jeff
Peakall) discovered a persistent sedimentary horizon within the WCG which
allows identification of gold liberated before or after this event. By
selectively sampling different sedimentary units Matt will be able to generate
a record of the compositions of gold liberated at different times- which can be
correlated to vertical variation in gold mineralogy at specific locations. This
project will also utilize the gold morphology- travelling distance correlation
developed at UBC Vancouver by Evan Crawford and Jim Mortensen. These distance
to source values can be integrated into the study to constrain the point of
liberation of the gold.
The
overall aim is to recreate the geometry of the zoned system within the eroded landscape
and to learn more of the nature of the Lone Star hydrothermal system to inform
exploration in that area and elsewhere.
Matt
has spent the summer in the Klondike familiarizing himself with the study area
before his official start date. PMG would like to thank both Klondike Gold
Corporation and Jim Mortensen of UBC for their help at this early stage of the
project.
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