Quick
Search: 
   
advanced search
 GSW Home    GeoRef Home    My GSW Alerts    Contact GSW    About GSW    Journals List    Help 

Brief Display | Full Display

Y. A. Kettaneh and J. P. N. Badham
Mineralization and paragenesis at the Mount Wellington Mine, Cornwall
Economic Geology and the Bulletin of the Society of Economic Geologists (July 1978), 73(4):486-495

Abstract:
The Mount Wellington mine is the most recent to recommence production in the United Kingdom. It lies on the southwestern extension of the Wheal Jane lodes. About half the production comes from the number 1 lode which lies in the footwall of a shallow-dipping elvan sheet. The numbers 2 and 3 lodes have a similar trend but dip more steeply; they join the main lode without intersecting it. These lodes are generally smaller than the number 1 lode but carry higher grades of tin. The remaining mine production comes from the number 2 lode, but the number 3 is at present unpayable. All these lodes have a similar mineralogy and paragenesis. The mineralization took place in four stages. In each lode the minerals of the two earlier phases replace brecciated fault zones and those of the two later phases fill dilatant fractures in the earlier material. These lodes were cut by the mineralized (but uneconomic) Hot lode which may have formed during the later stages of mineralization of the main lodes. All these lodes are cut by two groups of variously mineralized faults called caunterlodes and crosscourses, respectively. Both the main mineralizations and the elvan were controlled by two sets of faults developed around the cooling Carnmenellis granite cupola, probably in response to fluid overpressures.

Index Terms/Descriptors:
controls; Cornwall England; economic geology; endogene processes; England; Europe; faults; genesis; gold; Great Britain; lodes; metal ores; metals; mineral deposits, genesis; mineralization; Mount Wellington Mine; oxides; paragenesis; polymetallic ores; processes; silver; structural controls; sulfides; tin; United Kingdom; Western Europe

Latitude & Longitude:
N50°00'00" - N50°50'00" and W6°30'00" - W4°15'00" (Search for maps and images at Alexandria Digital Library)

GeoRef, Copyright 2006, American Geological Institute. Abstract, Copyright, Society of Economic Geologists


HOME HELP FEEDBACK SUBSCRIPTIONS SEARCH
Copyright © 1978 by the GeoScienceWorld.