New theory about hyper-rich gold veinsThe studies were made at the near by Brucejack mine example ! What if these conditions and catalysts which led to the hyper rich gold veins at Brucejack were working also on our near by land packages... ? At the good old Eskay Creek Mine they seemed to have worked as well ! See map below.
------------ McGill researchers solve puzzle of hyper-rich gold veins
May 25, 2021
by Canadian Mining Journal Staff
For decades scientists have been puzzled by the formation of rare hyper-enriched gold deposits in places like Ballarat in Australia, Serra Palada in Brazil, and Red Lake in Ontario. While such deposits typically form over tens to hundreds of thousands of years, these ultrahigh grade deposits can form in years, month, or even days. So how do they form so quickly?
Studying examples of these deposits from Pretium Resources’ (TSX: PVG; NYSE: PVG) Brucejack gold mine in northwestern British Columbia, McGill professor Anthony Williams-Jones of the Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences and PhD student Duncan McLeish have discovered that these gold deposits form much like soured milk. When milk goes sour, the butterfat particles clump together to form a jelly.
The researchers believe they have solved the paradox of how quickly bonanza grade deposits can form. For a century geologists thought there was not enough time to epithermal deposits to reach such high grades, but they do. With very low gold content in the migrating hot water, it should take millions of years to concentrate a single centimetre-wide crack with gold. However, such veins are known to grow in days, months or years.
Williams-Jones and McLeish used an electron microscope to produce the first evidence for gold colloid formation and flocculation in nature on a nano-scale. They then scaled up the images by integrating millions of the nano-veins to reveal how bonanza veins are formed.
Their findings will help geologists improve their understanding of how such deposits form and help them develop more effective ways of finding them.
The article was published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
------------