Project Details
Genesis of the Navachab Gold Deposit, Namibia
Applicant
Professor Dr. Franz Michael Meyer
Subject Area
Mineralogy, Petrology and Geochemistry
Term
from 2006 to 2009
Project identifier
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 23528250
The Navachab gold deposit in the Southern Central Zone of the Damara Orogen, Namibia, is situated within marbles, calc-silicate rocks and metapelitic schists of the Damara sequence. The mine is currently the only known lode-gold deposit in the extensive system of Pan-African orogenic belts in southern Africa. The deposit has experienced multiple episodes of high-T fluid-rock interaction during compressive deformation, that resulted in the formation of massive ¿replacement style¿ ore bodies, as well as several generations of quartz-sulfide veins. This study will examine the stable isotope and geochemical effects of superimposed fluid-rock interaction in this sediment-hosted lode-gold deposit. An isotopic tracer study on a continuous section from the unaltered host rocks through one of the ore bodies and representative quartz-sulphide veins will be undertaken in order to quantify the isotopic exchange between the ore-forming fluids and carbonaceous host rocks. In combination with fluid inclusion work (including in-situ chemical analyses of the fluid content), the results will provide new insights into the controls on hydrothermal fluid compositions, and the dynamics of this metamorphic (and magmatic?) hydrothermal system in a typical high-T, low-P metamorphic terrain.
DFG Programme
Research Grants
Participating Persons
Professorin Dr. Annika Dziggel; Professor Dr. Jochen Kolb