EXPM:RLGMF - Post by User
Post by
Wangotango67on Dec 24, 2021 5:14pm
200 Views
Post# 34261732
DISPLACEMENT - REPLACEMENT
DISPLACEMENT - REPLACEMENT My conclusion is still in the works, lol
Trying ot figure out if RLG is dealing with a mixed deposit.
Main vein - fractured fault.
Creates the Breccia.
Watershed moves in - moving silts clays and picks up the liberated gold and creates a secondary deposit -
Lands are low lying - i took severa lscreen shots of the layout of the lands in the historicla pdf - i see a depression with outlier ridges that have been erroded - looking at the displacement of the deposit it does run east to west - same as the depression - watershed clays can reweld the diseminated ores into rock - if the liberated gold was washed in a silted clay matrix and solidified into rock - it would be a case of, this entire eastern depression along strike could harbor gold but in a fashion of, how the watershed solidified it - movement of water - lower elevation - resistent points - would be the opportune to drill -
As one's more east,
a resistent point is seen at Porphyry Hill.
A dog leg occurs - and least resistent finds itself running southerly - washed ores.
Hence - why i think RLG's claims are - or could be - a secondary deposit - aside of the main vein - fault created.
The key in which might give clue are the Brecicated ores found outside the main vein .
Creating a displacement of the goldbearing vein that stretches beyond its epicenter.
If the Rowan main vein is a fault and fractured and created Breccia - and Porphyry Hill was a resistent point - creating a water shed dogleg - then... i would say, RLG is bang on following the NT zone - north east to south west.... Hnece thier current succeses at the NT zone.
NT zone - drill diagram - has most all drills headed easterly....
I'm seeing two contact zones - whereas - i wonder what the drills would show if drills pointed
opposite direction -
Again... if one were to look at this with new eyes-
and supposed the Rowan was a major fault and a watershed moved thorugh - creating secondary deposits - and a resistent point at Porphyry Hill, it\s an easy read that the gold would be guided in a dogleg fashion - moving southerly past Porphyry Hill.
Clastic Sediments with a watershed effect and seeing quasi veinlets - not true veins - with in the cores could portray an entirely different midest - hence why i wrote the post on quartz - if one can better understand quartz and how it develops aside of hydrothermal - and supposing quartz cancrystalize away from hydrothermal mentality- it's then, a second review can be proposed for a deposit. - one must keep in mind - it's reported that the gold - some - is in nuggety form - as soon as i read this... this was my turning point - looking at the depoist with a new set of eyes...
Could assist the junior greatly ,
knowing what other zones harbor gold.
I'll leave it at that...
I'm still in the works of researching their cliams...
it's good to look at projects with a different view.
There's all sorts of clues - ovder the years in historicals - that reveal much intel that may have been overlooked.
Happy Holidays....