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2014 Society of Economic Geologists, Inc.

Economic Geology, v. 109, pp. 17051733

High-Sulfidation Epithermal Pyrite-Hosted Au (Ag-Cu) Ore Formation


by Condensed Magmatic Vapors on Sangihe Island, Indonesia*
Julia King,1, A.E. Williams-Jones,1 Vincent van Hinsberg,1 and Glyn Williams-Jones2
1Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, McGill University, 3450 University Street, Montral, Qubec, Canada H3A 0E8
2Department of Earth Sciences, Simon Fraser University, 8888 University Drive, Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada V5A 1S6

Abstract
Although gold in high-sulfidation epithermal deposits generally occurs as the native metal or electrum, in
some deposits, a significant proportion of the gold is hosted in pyrite. Here we use a combination of petrog-
raphy, whole-rock geochemistry, pyrite chemistry, crystallography, and phase stability relationships to deter-
mine how gold was transported and incorporated into pyrite in two relatively young high-sulfidation epithermal
deposits, where the gold occurs almost exclusively in solid solution or as nanoparticles in pyrite.
The genetically related Bawone and Binebase Au (Cu-Ag) deposits, located 1 km apart on the volcanic island
of Sangihe, northeastern Indonesia, are hosted by andesitic volcaniclastic rocks that were altered to a proximal
advanced argillic association of quartz + pyrite (py I) + pyrophyllite + natroalunite + alunite + dickite + kaolin-
ite and a more distal intermediate argillic association of quartz + pyrite (py I) + kaolinite + dickite + illite. The
economic mineralization takes the form of multiple generations of auriferous pyrite, the first of which, pyrite
I (py I), developed during advanced argillic alteration. Mass balance calculations show that all elements were
mobile with the exception of Nb, Ti, some rare earth elements, and possibly Al.
The highest gold concentration is in pyrite II (py II), which occurs in veins that cut pyrite I. This drusy vari-
ety of pyrite is characterized by complex growth and sector zoning, and contains as much as 6.0 wt % Cu. The
elevated Cu concentrations correlate positively with Au and As concentrations, whereas the Ag concentration
correlates strongly with Au but not Cu. Later barite-enargite mineralization exploited py II veins and vugs, and
significant concentrations of Ag and Au are hosted by enargite, although the Au concentration in enargite is
lower than in py II or py I.
A model is presented in which the fluid responsible for advanced argillic and intermediate argillic alteration
and associated stage 1 gold mineralization was a condensed magmatic vapor derived from an oxidized magma.
The gold and other metals were transported as hydrated species that ascended through the volcanic pile via
fractures and zones of enhanced permeability to a depth between 900 and 1300 m, where the vapor condensed
at a temperature between 250 and 340C to form an acidic liquid with a pH of ~2.5; fO2 ranged up to four log
units above the hematite-magnetite buffer. Interaction of this liquid with the host andesites caused advanced
argillic and intermediate argillic alteration, including sulfidation of mafic minerals to form py I. During crystal-
lization of py I, Au, Cu and Ag were adsorbed onto the surface of the pyrite and deposited as nanoparticles, or
were incorporated in the pyrite structure. Adsorption of Au, Cu, and Ag from the condensed vapor reached a
peak during the crystallization of vein-hosted py II, and the uptake of Ag and minor Au continued during later
crystallization of enargite. From the distribution of metals among growth and sector zones in py II, incorpora-
tion of gold and other metals appears to have been maximized when physicochemical conditions were relatively
stable. This is in contrast to the requirement for native gold precipitation, namely that physicochemical gradi-
ents be steep to ensure supersaturation of gold in the ore fluid.

Introduction metals (Stoffregen, 1987; White and Hedenquist, 1990; Arri-


Although considerable progress has been made in under- bas, 1995; Hedenquist et al., 1998). Instead, these researchers
standing the formation of high-sulfidation epithermal pre- have attributed the mineralization to collapse of the vapor-
cious metal deposits, opinion is still divided over the nature dominated system and transport of the metals by a magmatic-
of the ore fluid. There is general agreement that the char- hydrothermal liquid with a large meteoric water component.
acteristic residual (vuggy) silica and advanced argillic altera- The discovery that gold mineralization in the Pascua deposit,
tion are the result of interaction of rocks with the condensate Chile, was contemporaneous with advanced argillic alteration
of highly acidic and oxidizing vapors (e.g., HCl, and H2S and (Chouinard et al., 2005a), indicates that for some high-sulfida-
H2SO4 produced by reaction of H2O with SO2) from a proxi- tion epithermal deposits (cf. Voudouris, 2010) the two-stage
mal magma source (e.g., Hemley and Jones, 1964; Stoffregen hydrothermal model does not apply. This, and a combina-
1987; Rye, 1993; Arribas 1995). However, until recently, most tion of fluid inclusion (Heinrich et al., 1999; Landtwing et
researchers, noting that the ore minerals commonly fill vugs al., 2010) and experimental evidence (Archibald et al., 2001,
and therefore postdate the alteration, have concluded that the 2002; Williams-Jones et al., 2002; Zezin et al., 2011b; Migdisov
fluid responsible for the alteration did not transport the ore and Williams-Jones, 2013; Hurtig and Williams-Jones, 2014)
showing that gold, silver, and copper may be considerably
Corresponding
more soluble in aqueous vapors than previously suspected,
author: e-mail, julia.j.king@gmail.com
*A digital supplement to this paper, containing four Appendices with raw
supports a model for these deposits in which hydrothermal
data, is available at http://economicgeology.org/ and at http://econgeol.geo- alteration and economic mineralization were both products
scienceworld.org/. of a magmatic hydrothermal vapor (cf. Williams-Jones and
Submitted: March 31, 2013
0361-0128/14/4246/1705-29 1705 Accepted: December 9, 2013
1706 KING ET AL.

Heinrich, 2005; Mavrogenes et al., 2010; Berger and Henley, per year), dense vegetation and inferred rapid uplift due to
2011; Henley and Berger, 2011; Scher et al., 2013). the compressive tectonic regime, even the oldest volcanoes, in
Most studies of high-sulfidation epithermal systems have the southern part of the island where the Bawone and Bine-
focused on deposits in which the gold occurs as a discrete base deposits are located, may be only tens of thousands of
mineral or minerals (e.g., native gold, electrum, and/or a tellu- years in age.
ride phase, such as calaverite; Kesler et al., 1981; Stoffregen, The southern part of Sangihe Island is dominated by clino-
1987; Moritz et al., 2004; Deditius et al., 2008). However, in pyroxene andesite flows, breccias, lahars, and tuffs of the
some high-sulfidation deposits, notably the Pascua deposit in Tamako Group, except in the southern and eastern parts
Chile, a high proportion of the gold is hosted in sulfide miner- where rocks of the Taware Group, Malisang Group, Bine-
als, particularly pyrite (e.g., Chouinard et al., 2005b; Deditius base Group, and Pinterang Formation are exposed (Fig. 2).
et al., 2009). Here, we report results of a study of two high- The Binebase deposit is 1 km to the north of Bawone, and
sulfidation epithermal deposits, Bawone (9.5 Mt of ore with both deposits are hosted by rocks of the Binebase Group. At
an average grade of 1.32 g/t Au and 3.97 g/t Ag) and Bine- Bawone, the Binebase Group is overlain unconformably by
base (17.9 Mt of ore with an average grade of 0.76 g/t Au and the Pinterang Formation, which covers the deposit, whereas
18.7g/t Ag), located on Sangihe Island, Indonesia, in which at Binebase, the deposit crops out and is strongly oxidized to
virtually all the hypogene gold is hosted in pyrite. Most signifi- a maximum depth of 70 m (Fig. 3). The Binebase Group has a
cantly, greater than 50% of this gold is in pyrite that forms part northeasterly strike, moderate to steep southeasterly dip, and
of the early advanced argillic alteration mineral association; comprises andesitic ash and crystal tuffs, hornblende-pyrox-
the rest is contained mainly in pyrite veins that cut the altered ene andesite flows, biotite-hornblende-magnetite diorite and
rocks. Thus, gold mineralization was both contemporaneous minor dacite to rhyolite flows, which are interpreted to be
with and postdated alteration. Based on this and other obser- volcanic and subvolcanic facies of the extinct and eroded
vations, we develop a model designed to explain the genesis of Taware volcano (Garwin, 1990). To the east of the Binebase
the Bawone and Binebase deposits involving transport of the deposit, Binebase Group rocks are overlain by rocks of the
metals in a highly acidic vapor and sorption of the gold onto Tamako Group (consisting of hornblende andesite flows, sills,
the surfaces of growing pyrite crystals. Given the early tim- and dikes), the proximal facies of the dormant and/or extinct
ing of the Au-Ag mineralization and the observation that it is Kakiraeng volcano, and to the south by the Pinterang For-
hosted almost exclusively by pyrite, we also propose that these mation. East of the Bawone deposit, the Pinterang Forma-
deposits are representatives of a subclass of high-sulfidation tion overlies the Tamako Group rocks unconformably. This
epithermal precious metal deposits, in which the bulk of the unit is thickest (<100 m) in topographic lows, and consists of
metal is hosted in pyrite and the ore fluid was a condensed reworked cross-bedded volcanic silts and sands, carbonates
magmatic vapor. and organic-rich sediments, which record a marine incursion
in the southeast part of Sangihe Island (Garwin, 1990). The
Regional Geologic Setting Pinterang Formation also contains slightly rounded, unoxi-
The Bawone and Binebase Au (Ag-Cu) deposits are located dized aggregates of pyrite fragments, similar to pyrite II (py
in the southern part of Sangihe Island, the largest of the II) from the Bawone and Binebase hypogene ores. The Pin-
islands in the 500 km long Sangihe arc, which runs north- terang Formation and Tamako Group overlie the Malisang
south from southern Mindanao, Philippines, to the north arm Group, which in turn unconformably overlies the Binebase
of Sulawesi, and separates the Celebes and Molucca Seas Group in the southeast part of the island. Stegodon fossils
(Figs. 1, 2; Hall, 2000). The Sangihe arc formed as a result of found in conglomeritic channels in the Pinterang Forma-
the westerly subduction of the Molucca Sea plate under the tion indicate that the unit is between 2 million years and
Eurasian plate, whereas the facing Halmahera arc was pro- 60,000years in age (de Vos et al., 2007). The Malisang Group
duced by the easterly subduction of the Molucca Sea plate consists of hornblende andesite flows, sills, dikes, and diorite
under the Philippine Sea plate (Morrice et al., 1983; Morrice intrusions that form local highs and is related to the Malisang
and Gill, 1986; Garwin, 1990; Hall, 1996, 2000). Twenty-five volcanic center (Garwin, 1990).
Quaternary stratovolcanoes are located along the length of the
arc; eight of these are active, including Awu at the northern Local Geologic Setting
tip of Sangihe Island (Morrice and Gill, 1986; Fig. 1). Previ- Recent oxidation has enriched both Au and Ag, and con-
ous studies of volcanism along the Sangihe Arc have shown sequently, much of the potentially economic mineralization
that the arc is composed mainly of two-pyroxene and horn- of the Binebase deposit and a part of the Bawone deposit are
blende andesites. Calc-alkaline suites dominate and vary from supergene in origin. However, both deposits have appreciable
low to high K, depending on their distance from the volcanic reserves of hypogene sulfide mineralization. The inferred
front (Morrice and Gill, 1986). resources, using a 0.25 g/t Au cutoff, are summarized in Table
Sangihe Island has a lobate form defined by volcanic cen- 1.
ters, the active stratovolcano, Awu, at the northern end and The Bawone and Binebase deposits are hosted by andesites
the dormant/extinct stratovolcanoes, Tahuna and Kakiraeng, and dacites of the Binebase Group. The Binebase deposit is
and strongly weathered centers of Taware and Malisang to the exposed at the erosional surface and has been oxidized up to
south (Fig. 1). The oldest part of the island is in the southeast a depth of 70m (Fig. 3B). The host andesite is a crystal-rich
and the youngest in the northwest; new volcanoes are forming tuff containing 10 to 15 vol % of plagioclase laths and round
off the northwestern tip and western shores of Sangihe Island quartz crystals (12 mm in length and diameter, respec-
(Beaulieu, 2010). Given the heavy rainfall (greater than 3 m tively) and occasional lapilli, and lithic fragments (0.53 cm
HIGH-SULFIDATION EPITHERMAL PYRITE-HOSTED Au ORE FORMATION, SANGIHE ISLAND, INDONESIA 1707

Sangihe I.

340'0"N

Awu (1327m)

Tahuna (697m)

335'0"N
330'0"N

Kakiraeng (1006m)
Binebase (65m)
Bawone (86m)

Malisang (295m)

325'0"N
Taware (306m)

0 10
320'0"N

Km

12530'0"E 12540'0"E
Fig. 1. Inset: Location of Sangihe Island. Digitial elevation model of Sangihe Island showing the locations and elevations
of the active volcano, Awu, dormant and/or extinct volcanic centers (Tahuna, Kakiraeng, Malisang) and the Bawone and Bine-
base deposits. Bathymetry contours are at 50-m intervals.

in diameter). Rare breccia zones containing a wide variety of samples, the andesite contains 5 to 30 vol % white plagio-
rock fragments are likely epiclastic deposits. clase laths (2 mm long) and rare, rounded quartz phenocrysts
At Bawone, a thick andesite unit overlies flow-banded pla- (2mm in diameter) in an aphanitic matrix. Conformable lay-
gioclase-quartz-phyric dacite (Figs. 3A, 4A). In least-altered ers of welded crystal tuff are locally present in the andesite.
These contain 10 vol % of megascopic crystals of <3-mm-long
Table 1. Inferred Resources for the Bawone and plagioclase laths and rare, rounded <3-mm-diameter quartz
Binebase Deposits (Stone, 2010) grains. This unit is intruded by hypabyssal andesitic por-
phyry (Fig. 3A). The hypabyssal porphyry contains 20 vol%,
Deposit Tonnes Au (g/t) Ag (g/t) Au (oz) Ag (oz) 5 mm long, subhedral to euhedral hornblende, magnetite,
Bawone Oxide 3,475,000 1.66 9.16 185,464 205,933 biotite and plagioclase phenocrysts, and rare quartz eyes in
Sulfide 5,999,000 1.12 0.97 216,020 187,089 an aphanitic matrix. An intrusive breccia with subangular
Binebase
Oxide 7,851,000 1.10 25.13 277,661 6,343,299
to subrounded, 1- to 10-cm-diameter fragments of the host
Sulfide 10,002,000 0.49 13.60 157, 573 4,373,443 andesite and dacite generally defines the margins of the hyp-
abyssal porphyry (Fig. 4B). At Bawone, the locally overlying
1708 KING ET AL.

12535'0"E 12540'0"E

Extinct Volcano
Intrusions
Quaternary Alluvium

330'0"N
330'0"N
Pinterang Formation
Tamako Group
Batunderang Group Binebase (65 m)
Malisang Group Bawone (86 m)
Binebase Group
Taware Group

Malisang (295 m)

Taware (306 m)
325'0"N

325'0"N
0 4
Km

12535'0"E 12540'0"E
Fig. 2. The geology of south Sangihe Island and the location of the Bawone and Binebase deposits, modified from Garwin
(1990).

Soil A BOD42 B
Pinterang Formation BOD1
Oxide zone
BID27 BOD3
Binebase Group
BID63 BID72
Andesitic crystal tuff BID69
BID16 BID56 Soil
BID60
BID57 Pinterang Formation
BID15 BID11 BID66 Oxide zone/weathered
Binebase Group
Porphyritic Intrusion
Binebase Group
Andesite porphyry
Andesitic tuff
Dacite

100 m

25 m

100 m 25 m

Fig. 3. Representative lithological cross sections (A) through the Binebase deposit (NW-SE) and (B) through the Bawone
deposit (SW-NE) based on drill holes. The black lines show the locations of the drill holes. Most primary features have been
destroyed in the oxide zone but the original nature of the rock is assumed to have been the same as that of the underlying
bedrock.
HIGH-SULFIDATION EPITHERMAL PYRITE-HOSTED Au ORE FORMATION, SANGIHE ISLAND, INDONESIA 1709

A B

Pl Mag

Bt

Hbl

C
D D
Kao + Qtz + Al

Py I
Py I + Qtz

Py II

Fig. 4. Photographs of the host rocks of the Bawone and Binebase deposits (cut slabs and core). (A) Argillically altered
flow-banded dacite, the basal unit of the Binebase Group at Bawone, showing phenocrysts and a matrix replaced by kaolinite
and quartz. (B) Plagioclase (Pl)-biotite (Bt), hornblende (Hbl)-magnetite (Mag) andesite porphyry. (C) Vein of py II (brassy)
with fragments of py I (black) in a matrix of vuggy py I with py II occasionally lining vugs. (D) Advanced argillic (alunite =
Al, pyrite = Py, quartz = Qtz) alteration of fragments (light gray) in a matrix of fine-grained quartz and pyrite (dark gray). The
scale bar is 1 cm.

Pinterang Formation (poorly consolidated volcaniclastic sand- samples commonly retain porphyritic textures, although the
stones and siltstones, organic-rich siltstones, and calcareous phenocrysts have generally been replaced by kaolinite or
mudstones) ranges up to 100 m thick and is separated from dickite. The most intensely altered samples consist of a fine-
the Binebase Group rocks by a thin (several-cm) oxide layer, grained mosaic of intergrown anhedral quartz, clay minerals
possibly a paleosol. The Pinterang Formation is overlain by an (kaolinite, dickite, pyrophyllite), sulfate minerals (alunite,
oxidized soil that is up to 4 m thick. natroalunite) and pyrite. Hereafter, the fine-grained, anhe-
dral pyrite intergrown with clay minerals and quartz will be
Hydrothermal Alteration referred to as pyrite I (py I).
In hand sample, the altered rocks vary from dark gray to Alteration created secondary porosity in the form of mm-
white in color, depending on the pyrite content, and from very scale vugs (formed by the dissolution of phenocrysts) and
hard (quartz dominated; Fig. 4C) to powdery (clay dominated; irregular, cm-scale cavities. The latter are commonly infilled
Fig. 4D) in drill core; the latter variation commonly occurs by alunite, and/or pyrophyllite, and/or drusy pyrite, and/or
over intervals of tens of centimeters to tens of meters. Altera- chalcocite, and/or barite crystals (Figs. 4C, 5C, D).
tion intensity is variable. In some samples, the primary min- Alteration is most intense (few primary textures preserved)
erals have been completely replaced by secondary minerals, along subvertical fluid conduits that fan out horizontally at
destroying all primary textures, whereas in other samples, vol- lithologic contacts (Fig. 6A). Distal to the mineralized zones,
canic textures are preserved (Figs. 4D, 5A). The pervasively alteration is generally less intense, primary volcanic textures
altered samples comprise very fine-grained, clay particles and minerals are preserved, and the rock is more competent.
intergrown with fine-grained, generally anhedral, equigranu- The matrix of the rock is preferentially altered and has a grey
lar quartz and pyrite (Fig. 5A, B, D). Less intensely altered to light-brown color.
1710 KING ET AL.

A B

Qtz
Py I
Al

Py I

C D

Py II
Py II

Cc

Brt
Py I + Qtz

E F
Py II
Sp El

Ccp

Apy

En Brt

Brt

Fig. 5. Photomicrographs showing the textures of the altered and mineralized rocks in reflected light (10 m scale bar).
(A) Amphibole phenocrysts replaced by py I in a groundmass replaced by fine-grained quartz, py I, kaolinite dickite.
(B) Fine-grained association of quartz, alunite and py I, typical of argillic alteration. (C) Massive py II and a vug containing
rare chalcocite (Cc) and barite (Brt) crystals. (D) Growth zoned drusy crystals of py II infilling a vug in andesite altered to
fine-grained py I and quartz (blue-grey is epoxy). (E) Fractured and zoned crystals of massive py II cut by a barite-enargite
(En) vein. (F) Sphalerite (Sp), arsenopyrite (Apy), chalcopyrite (Ccp) and electrum (El) crystals in a coarse-grained barite
matrix. The earliest stage of gold-silver mineralization is manifest by fine-grained py I associated with equally fine-grained
quartz and clay minerals (A, B). This was followed by a second generation of Au-Ag mineralization in the form of coarse-
grained py II (C, D, E). The third generation of Au-Ag mineralization is represented by barite-enargite (En) veins that com-
monly contain brecciated py II crystals (E). Rare cm-scale veins of barite containing electrum, sphalerite, arsenopyrite and
chalcopyrite that cut py I and py II mineralization constitute a fourth generation of Au-Ag mineralization observed only in
the Binebase deposit.
HIGH-SULFIDATION EPITHERMAL PYRITE-HOSTED Au ORE FORMATION, SANGIHE ISLAND, INDONESIA 1711

Supergene zone A Overburden and B


IA I (qtz + py + kao dck) Pinterang Fm.
AA I (qtz+py+prlnal)
IA II (qtz + ill py) BID 27 AA II (qtz+pynaldckkao) BOD 42
BID 63 BID 72 AA III (qtz+py+kaoal)
BID 69 IA I (qtz+kaopy) BOD 1 BOD 3
BID 16 BID 56 BID 60
BID 11 BID 57 BID 66
BID 15

100 m

25 m

100 m
25 m

Fig. 6. Representative cross section (A) NW-SE through the Binebase (BID) deposit and (B) SW-NE through the Bawone
(BOD) deposit showing the distribution of hypogene alteration facies established using X-ray diffraction analysis and core log-
ging. The locations of drill holes are indicated by the black lines. Abbreviations: alunite = al, dickite = dck, illite = ill, kaolinite
= kao, natroalunite = nal, pyrite = py, pyrophyllite = prl, quartz = qtz.

Two main alteration facies have been recognized, advanced laterally away from apparent fluid conduits. At Bawone, the
argillic and intermediate argillic, based on the mineral asso- upper part of the deposit is dominated by advanced argillic
ciations of quartz + pyrite + pyrophyllite + natroalunite + alteration. However, at Binebase the upper part of the deposit
alunite + dickite + kaolinite and quartz + pyrite + kaolinite is intensely oxidized due to weathering and supergene pro-
+ dickite + illite, respectively. Quartz and pyrite are nearly cesses, and advanced argillic alteration is not observed (Fig.
ubiquitous alteration phases, but the proportions of these 6B). The Bawone deposit was protected from the effects of
minerals and those of the accompanying phases, which were weathering by the overlying Pinterang Formation (Figs. 3A,
used to define the alteration facies, vary significantly. In prin- 6A). Advanced argillic alteration in the Bawone deposit ter-
ciple, the advanced argillic and intermediate argillic facies minates abruptly at the contact with the overlying Pinterang
can be subdivided into subfacies with fewer minerals that Formation, although a thin (cm-scale) oxide layer is present
reflect different physicochemical conditions. For example, at this contact. This layer indicates that the uppermost part
at quartz saturation (the case here), pyrophyllite is stable of the deposit was previously oxidized, and perhaps partially
at higher temperature than dickite, and dickite is stable at removed by erosion, prior to deposition of the Pinterang
higher temperature than kaolinite (Hemley et al., 1969; Stof- Formation.
fregen and Alpers, 1987; Stoffregen and Cygan, 1990). Simi- Advanced argillic alteration at Bawone forms subhorizon-
larly, natroalunite is stable at higher temperature than alunite tal zones just below the Pinterang Formation and about 75 m
provided that the K/Na ratio of the fluid is relatively con- lower stratigraphically, at the contact with a zone of andesitic
stant (Stoffregen and Cygan, 1990). Finally, illite is stable at tuff (Figs. 3A, 6A). Both zones appear to flare outward from
higher pH than kaolinite, dickite, and pyrophyllite. In view of a steeply inclined advanced argillic alteration zone that likely
these relationships, mapping, X-ray diffraction and infrared represents the conduit for the altering fluids. The upper parts
spectroscopy (TerraSpec) evidence were used to subdivide of the subhorizontal alteration zones and the central part of
the advanced argillic association into a high temperature, the inclined alteration zone are dominated by the high tem-
lower pH subfacies (advanced argillic I) of quartz + pyrite perature, advanced argillic I alteration subfacies. Below the
+ pyrophyllite natroalunite, an intermediate temperature, subhorizontal advanced argillic I alteration zones and adjacent
low pH, subfacies (advanced argillic II) of quartz + pyrite to the inclined advanced argillic I alteration zone, this subfa-
natroalunite dickite kaolinite, and a low temperature, cies changes to advanced argillic II alteration and distally to
low pH subfacies (advanced argillic III) of quartz + pyrite + intermediate argillic I alteration. Low temperature advanced
kaolinite + alunite (see Discussion; Temperature and pH) . argillic III alteration is present only at depth and locally may
The intermediate argillic association was subdivided into a develop directly below advanced argillic I alteration without
low pH subfacies (intermediate argillic I) of quartz + kaolin- intervening advanced argillic II alteration (Fig. 6A). Given its
ite pyrite dickite and a higher pH subfacies of quartz + distribution, the advanced argillic III alteration may be related
illite pyrite (intermediate argillic II). to the unmineralized hypabyssal porphyry intrusion (Fig. 3A).
The alteration facies are zoned, both vertically and horizon- At Binebase, the zone of supergene oxidation passes directly
tally, and the intensity of alteration decreases with depth and into intermediate argillic alteration. The latter comprises a
1712 KING ET AL.

blanket of intermediate argillic I alteration with several sub- stage in the form of rare barite, base-metal sulfide, and elec-
vertical roots that pass downward and laterally into intermedi- trum veins (Figs. 5F, 7D).
ate argillic II alteration (Fig. 6B). The earliest gold occurs in py I, which is an ubiquitous
alteration product intergrown with quartz and hydrous alu-
Hypogene Mineralization mina-rich phases and occurs as small (230 m diameter),
Neither free gold nor electrum is observed in the hypo- isotropic, anhedral grains, accounting for 2 to 20 vol % of the
gene zone of the Bawone deposit and very rarely in the Bine- rock; the gold grade corresponds to the proportion of pyrite
base deposit. Instead, the hypogene gold in both deposits is in the rock. As part of the advanced argillic alteration and to
invisible, i.e., hosted almost exclusively by pyrite. Silver is a much lesser extent the intermediate argillic alteration, this
also invisible, hosted by both pyrite and enargite, and cop- stage of mineralization was focused along vertical structures
per occurs mainly in pyrite and enargite (volumetrically much and spread out laterally near the top of the deposit where
less abundant than pyrite), as well as rare grains of chalcocite fluids were confined by less-permeable strata or paleo-water
in vugs (Fig. 5C). Gold (-silver) mineralization occurred in tables. At the Bawone deposit, advanced argillic I alteration is
three stages: (1) an early stage of disseminated Au-Agbear- also concentrated in a subhorizontal zone below an imperme-
ing pyrite during advanced argillic and intermediate argillic able andesitic tuff about 75 m below the base of the Pinterang
(minor) alteration (pyrite I; Figs. 5A, B, D, 7B), (2) an inter- formation (Figs. 3A, 6A).
mediate stage characterized by multiple generations of lenses, The second stage of gold mineralization is characterized
veins and breccias containing subhedral to euhedral, drusy, by veins, veinlets, blebs, breccias, lenses, and massive bodies
and massive to semimassive Au-Ag-Cu-bearing pyrite II (py of coarse-grained, brassy py II, which overprinted advanced
II; Figs. 5C-E, 7A, C), and (3) late-stage barite-enargite- argillic alteration and intermediate argillic I alteration,
pyrite II veins (Figs. 5C, E, 7C). At Binebase, there is a fourth exploited the secondary porosity created during alteration,

A B

Qtz + Al

Py II

Py I

Brt

C D

Brt
Brt

Py II Ccp

El
En

Fig. 7. BSE images of auriferous pyrite, py I and py II, and later generations of mineralization. The scale bar is 100 m
unless otherwise indicated. (A) Fragment of drusy py II exhibiting strong growth zoning in a barite (Brt) vein. (B) Dissemi-
nated PyI in a matrix of quartz (Qtz) and alunite (Al). (C) Barite-enargite (En) vein with m-scale, homogeneous subhedral-
euhedral enargite crystals intergrown with mm-scale subhedral barite surrounding fragments of py II. (D) Electrum (El)
grain surrounded by subhedral chalcopyrite (Ccp), barite (Brt), and sphalerite (Sp) (10 m scale bar).
HIGH-SULFIDATION EPITHERMAL PYRITE-HOSTED Au ORE FORMATION, SANGIHE ISLAND, INDONESIA 1713

and crosscut fine-grained py I. As is the case with py I, the gold Au Ag Cu As Sb


grade is controlled by the abundance of py II, which forms 3
to 90 vol % of the rock, although py II is variably enriched
in gold. In thin section, py II is coarse grained (0.12 mm
long), massive or net-textured, and ranges in morphology 40
from anhedral to euhedral (Figs. 5A, D, 7A, C). Botryoidal
and drusy textures also are common, and many crystals are
complexly zoned (Fig. 7A). In reflected light, some pyrite II

Depth (m)
crystals have an anhedral blue anisotropic core, which chemi-
cally is indistinguishable from the rest of the crystal (Fig. 5E).
Rare, isolated anhedral chalcocite crystals (3 mm in diameter) 60
are observed locally in vugs rimmed by drusy py II (Fig. 5C).
Growth zoning of py II crystals on the m-scale is common,
particularly in drusy crystals, which show a relatively stable
growth history recorded by continuous growth surfaces. It is
also observed in massive pyrite composed of crystals that grew
separately and were later annealed, resorbed, brecciated and
80
overgrown (Fig. 7A).

1000
2000
3000

1000
10
20

200

5000

50
250
Pyrite I and II are commonly crosscut by barite-enargite
veins (0.25 cm wide). These veins appear to have re-opened Concentration (ppm)
earlier py II veins, as they are commonly lined by fractured Fig. 8. The concentrations of Au, Ag, Cu, As, and Sb (ppm) in a drill hole
py II crystals, and py II commonly occurs as brecciated frag- from the Bawone deposit (BOD1); Pb and Zn concentrations were below the
ments in the veins, indicating that they were incorporated detection limit and Mo and Ba were not analyzed.
mechanically during barite-enargite vein formation (Figs. 5E,
7C). In the centers of these veins, intact, blue-purple, iso-
tropic subhedral to euhedral (1060 m long) rectangular or that any high-grade hypogene mineralization in this deposit
bladed enargite crystals and fractured py II fragments are sus- was at the level of the supergene zone. This interpretation is
pended in a matrix of coarse-grained, subhedral to drusy bar- consistent with the observation that the remaining hypogene
ite crystals. Texturally, the enargite is homogeneous, unzoned, mineralization has a much lower concentration of gold and
and appears to have coprecipitated with barite (Figs. 5E, 7C). silver than the Bawone deposit (Table 1).
Barite and enargite also commonly occur in vugs. The den- Assay data for 1m intervals of drill core for Bawone and
sity of barite-enargite veins (the proportion of veins relative to Binebase, made available by East Asia Minerals Corp., show
host-rock) is variable but generally correlates with that of py that there is a strong spatial correlation between Au and Ag
II veins, suggesting that both vein stages exploited the same concentrations, and also of As with Cu, and a weaker correla-
structures. tion of Cu and As with Sb (and Pb and Zn, not shown) concen-
Although electrum is volumetrically insignificant, the gold trations (Fig. 8). Molybdenum concentrations are below the
grade of these rare base-metal sulfide-electrum-barite veins is 2 ppm detection limit. The distribution of Au, Ag, As, and Cu
20 times higher than that of the auriferous-pyrite dominated is vertically zoned, with the highest concentrations of these
zones of the deposit. In the Binebase deposit, these veins elements occurring at the top of the hypogene zone. The
range from 0.5 to 8 cm in width and are observed in the center highest Au value coincides with high Cu, As, and Sb values
of the hypogene mineralization. This rare vein association was reflecting the presence of barite-enargite veins. This relation-
only observed at Binebase, where it crosscuts all other min- ship, however, does not hold for the second highest Au value
eralization stages, except for the enargite-barite veins. The (Fig. 8). Indeed, most of the higher Cu, As, and Sb values are
relative timing of these two late vein generations therefore accompanied by only minor to negligible enrichment in Au.
cannot be established. Mineralogically, the base metal sulfide- We interpret these metal distributions to indicate that barite-
electrum-barite veins comprise small subhedral to euhedral enargite veins contributed only minor amounts of gold and
crystals of spalerite, arsenopyrite, chalcopyrite, galena, pyrite, locally re-opened veins of py II to produce the coincident Au,
electrum and Sb-sulfides that occur as aggregates in a coarse- Cu, As, and Sb peaks.
grained matrix of euhedral barite crystals (Figs. 5F, 7D).
Mass Changes During Alteration
Distribution of gold-silver mineralization
Fifty-four drill core samples of the different lithological
Gold and silver grades in the Bawone deposit are highest units and alteration types were analyzed for major, trace, and
just below the contact with the Pinterang Formation, decrease rare earth elements (REE) by inductively coupled plasma-
with depth and then increase again just below a thin tuffa- mass spectrometry (ICP-MS), and for gold by instrumental
ceous andesite unit in a zone of advanced argillic I alteration neutron activation analysis (INAA), by Actlabs in Vancouver
(Figs. 3A, 6A, 8). Metal concentrations correlate with the pro- (Table 2). The compositions of the altered rocks were com-
portion of py II, pyrite breccias and/or barite-enargite veins. A pared to those of the least-altered rocks to evaluate the gains
similar geometry is inferred for the hypogene mineralization and losses of elements during alteration. In order to assess
at Binebase. However, because the upper part of the Bine- these mass changes, it was first necessary to identify poten-
base deposit was subjected to supergene oxidation, we infer tially immobile elements that could be used to normalize
1714 KING ET AL.

Table 2. Major Element Compositions from Drill Core and Hand

IA I IA I IA I IA I IA I IA I IA I/BaEn IA I/BaEn
d.l. BOD1-134.5 BOD3-158.8 BOD3-85.4 BOD3-74.1 BOD3-106.4 BOD3-83.3 BOD3-99.2 BOD3-96.8

SiO2 (%) 0.01 55.4 64.68 8.2 58.66 51.41 48.19 19.69 85.78
TiO2 (%) 0.001 0.546 0.547 0.036 0.528 0.484 0.541 0.185 0.501
Al2O3 (%) 0.01 19.8 14.36 0.33 9.13 2.91 2.85 0.3 2.34
Fe2O3 (%) 0.01 4.26 8.38 35.08 13.45 27.98 30.09 40.04 6.14
MnO (%) 0.001 0.008 0.009 0.005 0.006 0.007 0.006 0.006 0.006
MgO (%) 0.01 0.75 0.02 0.02 0.01 0.02 0.02 0.02 0.02
CaO (%) 0.01 0.78 0.03 0.04 0.06 0.05 0.04 0.03 0.06
Na2O (%) 0.01 0.35 0.05 0.06 0.56 0.06 0.07 0.04 0.04
K2O (%) 0.01 2.17 0.08 0.02 0.69 0.02 0.04 0.05 0.04
P2O5 (%) 0.01 0.1 0.08 b.d. 0.06 0.04 0.05 b.d. 0.08
Total (%) 0.01 98.53 100.1 66.75 99.83 100.3 100.3 82.61 99.49
LOI (%) 14.36 11.82 23.02 16.69 17.33 18.38 22.25 4.49

La (ppm) 0.05 15.8 8.91 11 5.52 5.38 6.03 8.38 13.9


Ce (ppm) 0.05 32.1 16.5 7.29 8.67 8.77 10 8.03 26
Pr (ppm) 0.01 3.83 1.94 0.49 0.96 1.17 1.33 0.79 2.97
Nd (ppm) 0.05 14 8 1.21 3.95 4.15 4.67 2.55 12.1
Sm (ppm) 0.01 2.66 1.64 0.34 0.81 0.78 0.84 0.61 2.31
Eu (ppm) 0.005 0.791 0.596 b.d. 0.197 0.155 0.185 0.472 0.649
Gd (ppm) 0.01 2.18 1.2 1.51 0.61 0.57 0.58 1.02 1.49
Tb (ppm) 0.01 0.36 0.14 0.04 0.13 0.08 0.09 0.1 0.16
Dy (ppm) 0.01 2.19 0.72 0.09 0.76 0.42 0.44 0.28 0.89
Ho (ppm) 0.01 0.45 0.15 0.02 0.19 0.09 0.08 0.07 0.16
Er (ppm) 0.01 1.41 0.52 0.09 0.75 0.43 0.39 0.23 0.73
Tm (ppm) 0.005 0.237 0.103 0.014 0.157 0.08 0.067 0.042 0.146
Y (ppm) 0.5 12.8 4 1.3 5.6 3 2.8 2.5 5.2
Yb (ppm) 0.01 1.78 0.72 0.08 1.02 0.61 0.52 0.31 1.03
Lu (ppm) 0.002 0.31 0.119 0.012 0.173 0.101 0.091 0.053 0.174

Ag (ppm) 0.5 b.d. 0.5 11.5 b.d. 0.8 0.7 3.9 b.d.
As (ppm) 5 487 64 1,350 124 66 22 1,180 19
Au (ppb) 2 b.d. 306 1,500 751 1,110 1,190 2,000 723
Ba (ppm) 3 327 129 178,900 6,822 3,050 4,094 98,830 212
Bi (ppm) 0.1 b.d. 8.4 26.7 0.6 1 1.4 3.6 5
Co (ppm) 1 13 10 47 23 108 112 104 18
Cr (ppm) 20 b.d. b.d. b.d. b.d. 30 30 60 b.d.
Cs (ppm) 0.1 0.5 b.d. 0.2 b.d. 0.2 b.d. 0.3 b.d.
Cu (ppm) 10 40 170 4,550 1,780 490 2,590 4,540 270
Ga (ppm) 1 18 28 4 7 10 7 3 8
Ge (ppm) 0.5 1.8 2.8 0.6 b.d. b.d. b.d. 0.5 1.2
Hf (ppm) 0.1 2.2 1.8 0.2 2.4 2 1.6 0.8 3.1
In (ppm) 0.1 b.d. b.d. 0.4 b.d. b.d. b.d. 0.2 0.1
Mo (ppm) 2 b.d. 5 28 4 12 6 14 13
Nb (ppm) 0.2 6.4 2.2 1.1 2.7 2.6 2.7 1.3 2.3
Ni (ppm) 20 b.d. b.d. b.d. b.d. 30 30 40 b.d.
Pb (ppm) 5 8 49 174 12 38 25 57 18
Rb (ppm) 1 36 b.d. b.d. 1 3 b.d. 2 b.d.
Sb (ppm) 0.2 b.d. 2.8 112 10 2.5 b.d. 70.5 4.8
Sc (ppm) 1 11 13 b.d. 9 7 5 3 10
Sn (ppm) 1 b.d. b.d. 15 b.d. 1 b.d. 5 b.d.
Sr (ppm) 2 248 702 1,484 477 298 310 772 515
Ta (ppm) 0.01 0.35 0.18 0.06 0.18 0.2 0.15 0.08 0.21
Th (ppm) 0.05 2.79 1.53 0.5 1.51 1.19 1.96 0.5 2.05
Tl (ppm) 0.05 2.28 1.34 4.56 0.68 1.31 0.48 0.16 0.36
U (ppm) 0.01 1.02 0.59 0.14 0.47 0.87 0.55 0.38 1.68
V (ppm) 5 128 158 8 80 46 39 11 33
W (ppm) 0.5 b.d. 4.1 19.2 4 4.4 9.9 2.6 6.4
Zn (ppm) 30 1,060 140 b.d. 1,030 360 100 b.d. 320
Zr (ppm) 1 81 78 6 86 75 58 30 144
HIGH-SULFIDATION EPITHERMAL PYRITE-HOSTED Au ORE FORMATION, SANGIHE ISLAND, INDONESIA 1715

Samples from the Bawone (BOD) and Binebase (BID) Deposits

Porphyry

AA I AA I AA I AA I AA I AA I AA I/BaEn AA II AA II AA II AA II
BOD3-49.8 BOD3-55 BOD3-85.5 BOD3-48.6 BOD3-100 BOD3-78.7 BOD3-113.7 BOD42-62.3 BOD3-125.4 BOD3-46.9 BOD3-34.4

56.29 43.28 42.65 48.8 29.11 8.74 63.84 49.79 51.37 53.65 20.65
0.53 0.373 0.492 0.492 0.377 0.22 0.43 0.46 0.474 0.603 0.684
13.22 6.17 3.28 10.38 0.26 1.25 7.59 10.59 11.21 12.29 19.21
8.23 15.17 32.38 17.76 46.64 59.44 10.06 16.73 12.06 12.72 30.85
0.009 0.01 0.007 0.007 0.009 0.014 0.005 0.01 0.003 0.008 0.012
0.01 0.01 0.02 b.d. 0.02 0.03 0.01 0.02 b.d. 0.02 0.03
0.08 0.05 0.04 0.06 0.04 0.05 0.06 0.06 0.07 0.12 0.07
0.76 0.42 0.15 0.48 0.05 0.06 0.84 0.38 0.92 0.71 0.17
1.35 0.47 0.15 0.71 0.03 0.02 0.81 0.36 1.21 0.71 0.18
0.12 0.04 0.04 0.1 0.02 0.02 0.08 0.12 0.08 0.2 0.22
99.58 84.1 99.82 99.86 100.1 100.8 99.15 97.66 97.92 100 99.21
18.98 18.11 20.61 21.06 23.58 31.01 15.42 19.13 20.52 19 27.12

8.79 9.01 4.95 7.79 2.93 2.58 6.53 8.76 7.62 10.8 8.29
16.3 14.8 8.42 14 4.48 3.36 11.5 17 13.9 20.5 15.5
1.92 1.96 1.14 1.62 0.57 0.41 1.63 2.08 1.61 2.43 2.06
7.94 7.17 3.91 6.71 2 1.35 5.76 8.38 6.79 10.4 7.02
1.49 1.56 0.75 1.36 0.37 0.26 1.13 1.8 1.43 2.33 1.25
0.442 0.349 0.176 0.377 0.086 0.058 0.318 0.453 0.425 0.689 0.319
1.13 1.55 0.53 0.98 0.27 0.2 0.82 1.23 1.15 2.15 0.87
0.18 0.16 0.07 0.16 0.04 0.03 0.14 0.15 0.15 0.31 0.13
1.04 0.69 0.39 0.82 0.26 0.16 0.75 0.77 0.85 1.69 0.71
0.25 0.15 0.08 0.19 0.08 0.03 0.15 0.16 0.17 0.36 0.16
0.86 0.56 0.35 0.73 0.3 0.14 0.66 0.56 0.62 1.21 0.59
0.174 0.101 0.065 0.148 0.057 0.026 0.134 0.104 0.122 0.237 0.115
6.6 5.2 2.5 5.5 2.1 1.1 4.5 4 5.2 10.4 4
1.16 0.78 0.45 1.04 0.46 0.17 0.9 0.84 0.84 1.64 0.83
0.189 0.13 0.085 0.177 0.075 0.029 0.154 0.162 0.137 0.274 0.138

b.d. 0.6 b.d. b.d. 2.3 2.2 0.6 1 b.d. b.d. 1.9
38 314 14 20 167 36 8 74 28 56 141
166 666 1,470 580 1,710 1,690 287 487 300 396 1,390
779 95,970 1,990 1,344 1,473 511 370 1,865 688 1,458 1,736
b.d. b.d. 0.3 b.d. 5.6 1.7 0.1 3.2 1.1 0.2 0.7
10 22 115 10 157 188 25 9 28 12 28
20 50 b.d. b.d. 20 20 30 b.d. b.d. b.d. 30
b.d. 0.1 b.d. b.d. 0.2 b.d. b.d. 0.3 b.d. b.d. 0.2
230 1,550 1,450 1,010 2,870 2,010 490 410 350 710 1,460
18 19 7 32 1 3 11 10 10 48 58
0.8 b.d. b.d. b.d. b.d. b.d. b.d. 0.9 0.6 b.d. b.d.
2.5 1.9 1.5 2 2.4 0.6 2.2 2 1.7 2.8 3.3
b.d. 0.2 b.d. b.d. 0.1 b.d. 0.1 b.d. 0.2 b.d. b.d.
b.d. 3 4 b.d. 21 29 3 2 2 4 9
2.6 2 2.6 2.2 1.9 1 2.1 2.1 2 3 2.9
b.d. b.d. 30 b.d. 40 60 b.d. b.d. b.d. b.d. 30
23 b.d. 47 62 84 15 14 354 14 30 46
b.d. 2 1 2 b.d. 1 b.d. 2 b.d. 1 1
1 6.5 b.d. b.d. 11.5 9.3 0.8 2.1 1.3 1.9 8.7
13 8 6 13 5 2 8 11 10 13 28
b.d. b.d. b.d. b.d. 2 b.d. b.d. 5 1 b.d. 4
669 564 310 592 60 83 455 641 532 931 1,717
0.2 0.14 0.14 0.12 0.14 0.06 0.14 0.15 0.15 0.19 0.21
1.61 1.3 1.08 1.38 0.72 0.31 1.05 1.24 1.25 1.78 2.41
0.72 0.33 0.75 4.03 0.61 0.82 0.6 2.7 1.15 2.52 4.41
0.51 0.45 0.79 0.68 0.77 0.35 0.56 0.57 0.54 0.63 1.25
132 73 42 148 21 32 88 94 109 174 259
3.3 1.6 20.3 0.8 1.7 6.1 46 0.5 6.4 7.9 2.2
430 260 360 460 80 50 270 120 500 1,070 290
95 68 59 70 87 18 69 65 75 98 99
1716 KING ET AL.

Table 2.

Porphyry

AA II AA II AA II AA II AA II AA II/BaEn AA III AA III AA III


BOD3-27.3 BOD3-79.5 BOD3-132.9 BOD3-41 BOD3-65.4 BOD3-65.8 BOD1-115 BOD1-124.9 BOD3-122.6

SiO2 (%) 7.08 65.52 59.09 39.59 56.91 17.64 59.72 61.62 39.9
TiO2 (%) 1.029 0.485 0.624 0.567 0.431 0.082 0.61 0.773 0.298
Al2O3 (%) 24.05 6.24 16.11 3.97 5.67 0.81 16.49 16.96 3.6
Fe2O3 (%) 19.86 14.38 7.88 32.64 18.17 31.27 7.98 5.73 32.09
MnO (%) 0.005 0.006 0.016 0.017 0.005 0.003 0.014 0.022 0.006
MgO (%) 0.03 b.d. 0.02 0.02 0.02 0.02 0.02 0.03 0.02
CaO (%) 0.12 0.05 0.08 0.07 0.08 0.04 0.11 0.1 0.04
Na2O (%) 1.22 0.05 0.23 0.16 0.43 0.06 0.07 0.14 0.31
K2O (%) 3.49 0.01 0.17 0.21 0.42 b.d. 0.03 0.03 0.29
P2O5 (%) 0.43 0.1 0.18 0.13 0.11 b.d. 0.21 0.11 0.04
Total (%) 98.86 98.17 98.46 99.66 100 77.25 98.39 99.98 98.21
LOI (%) 41.55 11.31 14.06 22.28 17.79 22.94 13.13 14.47 21.62

La (ppm) 16.8 8.97 11.4 10.4 8.48 6.84 12.1 9.83 3.87
Ce (ppm) 31.1 15.8 22.1 19.4 15.4 5.76 24.7 17.9 5.81
Pr (ppm) 3.44 2.12 2.59 2.68 2.08 0.53 2.84 2.1 0.71
Nd (ppm) 13.5 7.48 11.2 9.94 7.45 1.48 12 8.17 2.53
Sm (ppm) 2.4 1.34 2.45 2.19 1.4 0.35 2.44 1.56 0.53
Eu (ppm) 0.496 0.368 0.854 0.68 0.415 0.18 0.616 0.784 0.181
Gd (ppm) 1.53 0.88 1.96 1.77 1 0.76 1.59 1.19 0.49
Tb (ppm) 0.19 0.12 0.24 0.22 0.15 0.05 0.2 0.2 0.06
Dy (ppm) 0.95 0.65 1.23 1.14 0.77 0.17 1.04 1.25 0.28
Ho (ppm) 0.2 0.13 0.26 0.22 0.18 0.03 0.23 0.28 0.06
Er (ppm) 0.71 0.6 0.99 0.83 0.74 0.13 0.78 0.99 0.24
Tm (ppm) 0.14 0.123 0.184 0.144 0.151 0.022 0.142 0.18 0.044
Y (ppm) 5.3 4.2 6.9 6.6 5.1 1.7 6.2 7.1 1.8
Yb (ppm) 1.06 0.9 1.35 1.02 1.07 0.16 1.17 1.42 0.31
Lu (ppm) 0.183 0.15 0.218 0.164 0.174 0.028 0.23 0.28 0.055

Ag (ppm) 3.2 b.d. b.d. 1.6 2.8 3.7 b.d. 1.1 4.5
As (ppm) 55 106 104 442 311 2,500 60 125 242
Au (ppm)
1,240 717 345 1,310 1,080 1,280 273 130 1,760
Ba (ppm)
1,546 2,354 1,517 2,519 4,145 106,900 802 1,609 13,280
Bi (ppm) 1.2 b.d. 1.5 0.7 0.3 0.3 0.4 1 0.6
Co (ppm) 17 53 11 25 26 54 8 10 111
Cr (ppm) 40 30 20 30 30 30 30 20 30
Cs (ppm) 0.1 b.d. b.d. b.d. b.d. b.d. b.d. 0.3 0.3
Cu (ppm) 640 1,440 180 3,500 2,720 15,000 70 90 2,470
Ga (ppm) 184 13 18 24 19 6 13 19 8
Ge (ppm) b.d. 1.7 0.7 0.6 1.2 1.2 3.7 2.1 0.6
Hf (ppm) 4 3.6 2.1 2.1 2.2 0.3 2.4 2.8 1.1
In (ppm) 0.2 b.d. b.d. b.d. 0.1 0.2 b.d. b.d. 0.1
Mo (ppm) 12 18 15 11 5 21 58 49 38
Nb (ppm) 4.2 2.4 2.6 2.2 2.2 0.6 4.2 2.9 1.5
Ni (ppm) 20 20 b.d. 30 b.d. 20 b.d. b.d. 50
Pb (ppm) 149 b.d. 17 11 181 b.d. 74 120 28
Rb (ppm) 2 b.d. b.d. 1 1 1 b.d. b.d. 2
Sb (ppm) 8.8 34.4 2.1 35.6 24.6 120 4.5 10.4 27.7
Sc (ppm) 35 10 14 10 9 2 14 23 5
Sn (ppm) 5 3 b.d. 6 4 6 4 2 3
Sr (ppm)
2,840 682 1,060 655 571 1,109 685 295 411
Ta (ppm) 0.3 0.21 0.2 0.17 0.16 0.04 0.19 0.2 0.1
Th (ppm) 3.8 1.66 1.85 1.52 1.33 0.32 1.83 1.93 0.52
Tl (ppm) 3.81 0.93 1.53 0.49 4.59 0.07 1.21 3.13 0.4
U (ppm) 5.45 1.91 1.45 0.84 0.51 0.25 0.67 12.6 0.4
V (ppm) 410 69 157 91 59 17 120 199 36
W (ppm) 5.3 2.1 0.8 3.4 12.9 1.6 b.d. b.d. 2.5
Zn (ppm) 310 40 120 70 300 190 360 960 b.d.
Zr (ppm) 141 109 95 55 73 9 89 101 36

Note: The sample name indicates the drill hole number and the depth; samples are organized by lithology (porphyry or crystal tuff) and alteration-type
(IA = intermediate argillic, BaEn = barite-enargite veins, AA = advanced argillic; see text for description), identified based on petrographic observations,
bulk rock geochemistry and/or X-ray diffraction analyses
HIGH-SULFIDATION EPITHERMAL PYRITE-HOSTED Au ORE FORMATION, SANGIHE ISLAND, INDONESIA 1717

(Cont.)

Crystal Tuff

Least altered IA I IA I IA I IA II IA II IA II IA II IA II IA II IA II
PANTAI BID70-61.7 BID24-101 BID39-41.2 BID43-39.5 BID26-102.5 BID15-84.2 BID18-144.5 BID18-183.2 BID23-68.6 BID26-58

58.37 63.89 65.1 29.58 66.18 60.58 58.02 56.54 56.83 56.02 47.52
0.546 0.627 0.706 1.423 0.587 0.68 0.771 0.796 0.852 0.667 0.902
15.2 11.62 12.71 26.73 12.6 14.96 16.24 17.84 18.21 15.5 19.49
5.59 9.89 8.13 18.12 5.45 6.7 7.15 6.92 6.79 6.86 6.34
0.132 0.005 0.005 0.004 0.017 0.023 0.018 0.015 0.027 0.019 0.025
2.86 0.04 0.03 0.06 0.99 1.04 0.96 1.86 0.84 1.15 0.68
7.02 0.06 0.07 0.11 0.33 0.38 0.14 0.45 0.8 0.57 0.62
2.79 0.04 0.04 0.07 0.04 0.03 0.07 0.06 0.06 0.06 0.09
1.1 0.26 0.02 0.05 3.55 3.79 4.29 2.12 2.41 4.17 6.09
0.2 0.15 0.16 0.43 0.16 0.17 0.15 0.23 0.2 0.14 0.23
99.55 98.27 98.77 98.61 99.88 99.07 99.25 98.31 99.5 100.5 98.29
5.74 11.69 11.81 22.04 9.97 10.72 11.44 11.47 12.49 15.38 16.31

12.5 7.53 9.05 10.5 6.12 6.04 8.04 10.3 10.5 11.9 12.7
24.6 14.6 18.6 16.1 11.7 13.5 18.3 21.5 21.7 23.3 25.6
3.13 1.52 2.13 1.35 1.46 1.69 2.52 2.83 2.93 3.04 3.33
12.8 6.08 8.82 3.57 6.05 7.94 11.1 12.2 12.4 12.6 14.1
2.96 1.05 1.88 0.39 1.98 2.51 2.98 3.37 3.36 2.91 3.51
1.03 0.352 0.595 0.2 0.581 0.84 0.858 0.947 1.09 0.891 1.1
2.89 0.73 1.36 0.32 2.46 3.12 3.11 3.49 3.58 2.97 3.74
0.48 0.12 0.17 0.05 0.46 0.57 0.55 0.58 0.63 0.52 0.65
2.87 0.81 0.86 0.32 2.94 3.59 3.39 3.58 3.9 3.28 4.01
0.6 0.21 0.19 0.09 0.61 0.73 0.69 0.77 0.81 0.68 0.82
1.81 0.75 0.71 0.37 1.79 2.19 2.04 2.38 2.36 2.04 2.42
0.283 0.136 0.135 0.079 0.277 0.344 0.324 0.37 0.379 0.319 0.382
16.6 6.1 5.5 2.4 17.7 21.7 19.2 21.6 22.2 19.2 22.4
1.97 1.09 1.1 0.75 1.92 2.4 2.39 2.62 2.67 2.25 2.64
0.331 0.205 0.209 0.173 0.322 0.411 0.435 0.445 0.466 0.374 0.452

b.d. 0.6 b.d. 1.9 12.7 6.5 3.2 b.d. b.d. b.d. b.d.
b.d. 10 19 25 204 43 15 9 10 94 118
b.d. 57 66 391 317 27 54 21 13 b.d. b.d.
181 664 107 1,837 8,105 2,045 1,381 130 139 749 744
b.d. 0.4 0.5 4.2 b.d. b.d. b.d. b.d. b.d. b.d. b.d.
14 8 21 80 16 14 14 21 21 16 18
20 b.d. b.d. 200 20 b.d. b.d. 20 b.d. b.d. b.d.
1.5 b.d. b.d. 0.3 1.1 2 1.7 1.2 1.3 3 4.4
30 200 100 490 160 40 50 60 80 60 70
14 8 12 16 14 14 15 16 17 15 19
1.5 1.4 1.7 2 0.8 0.6 0.5 1.5 1.7 0.7 0.8
2.3 2.1 2.2 4.2 1.9 2.2 2.4 2.6 2.4 2 2.7
b.d. b.d. b.d. b.d. b.d. b.d. b.d. b.d. b.d. b.d. b.d.
b.d. b.d. 10 19 16 3 b.d. 3 b.d. b.d. b.d.
2.7 2.7 2.4 4.9 2.1 2.3 2.8 2.7 3.1 2.3 3.3
b.d. b.d. b.d. 30 b.d. b.d. b.d. b.d. b.d. b.d. b.d.
b.d. 15 25 55 1,080 44 54 10 23 30 b.d.
21 4 b.d. 3 79 82 93 42 52 80 105
b.d. 1.7 b.d. 4.1 12.7 9.7 1.8 b.d. 6.7 11.5 9.7
18 14 14 18 21 26 29 25 32 25 32
b.d. 3 3 11 2 b.d. b.d. b.d. b.d. b.d. b.d.
367 1,040 688 3,854 184 73 59 23 47 54 61
0.17 0.15 0.17 0.3 0.13 0.14 0.16 0.15 0.16 0.12 0.18
1.83 1.22 1.03 1.73 1.29 1.23 1.63 1.59 5.43 1.31 1.85
0.1 0.38 0.75 0.39 4.04 0.9 1.07 0.35 0.28 3.85 2.83
0.77 0.38 0.91 0.59 5.01 0.74 0.61 0.52 1.84 0.6 0.65
171 120 123 222 178 201 248 245 285 221 283
2.4 0.8 0.8 2.4 3.6 5.6 8.7 2 1.3 b.d. b.d.
60 b.d. 80 b.d. 3,450 320 300 70 320 350 470
89 72 80 130 67 76 82 92 85 70 100
1718 KING ET AL.

the compositions of the altered rocks to those of their least- commonly occurs in the form of blebs that filled pores cre-
altered equivalents. This was done by making binary plots of ated by advanced argillic and intermediate argillic I altera-
the data, and determining which element pairs were linearly tion (and thus postdated this alteration), we suspect that most
distributed, as such a distribution would correspond to a rela- if not all of the apparent enrichment in Fe is an artifact due
tively constant mass ratio for the elements and could indicate to unavoidable inclusion of py II in the samples analyzed to
that they were immobile (e.g., MacLean and Kranidiotis, represent this alteration. The intermediate argillic altera-
1987; Warren et al., 2007; Agrawal et al., 2008). These plots tion II samples were also depleted in Mn, Mg, Ca, P, and
show that concentrations of pairs of the following elements, particularly in Na, but appear to have conserved Al, Si, and
Zr, Ti, Nb, Hf, and Ta, form linear arrays. However, because Fe. In contrast to advanced argillic and intermediate argillic
Ti, Nb, and Ta are not incorporated into the same minerals as I alteration, these samples are strongly enriched in K. The
Zr and Hf (Ti, Nb, and Ta occur in rutile and Zr and Hf in zir- overall distribution of trace metals and semimetals (Au, Cu,
con), the linear variation of Zr with Ti was taken as evidence of As, Ag, Cr, Co, Ni, Zn, Mo, Sn, Sb, Tl, W, and Pb) indicates
immobility (Fig. 9). Assuming that Zr and Ti were immobile, that they were added during all stages of alteration, albeit in
the concentration of these elements in each altered sample variable quantities (it should be noted that because of the py
was normalized to their concentration in a least altered sam- II problem referred to above, the additions of Cu and Au for
ple for each rock type using the method of Grant (1986). To advanced argillic and intermediate argillic I alteration may be
scale the changes for each element proportionally so that the overestimated). However, whereas Rb and Cs were depleted
mass change for an unaltered rock is zero, the concentration (or unchanged) and Sr added during advanced argillic and
of each element was multiplied by the ratio of the immobile intermediate argillic I alteration, the opposite occurred dur-
element concentrations (Zr and Ti) in the fresh rock to that in ing intermediate argillic II alteration, i.e., Sr was depleted
the altered rock. Values less than unity indicate losses of ele- and Rb and Cs enriched (Fig. 10).
ments relative to their concentrations in the unaltered rock, Both the advanced argillic and intermediate argillic I
and values greater than unity indicate gains (Fig. 10). altered rocks underwent substantial mass losses in all REEs,
Three distinct patterns of relative gains and losses are with the degree of depletion increasing progressively with
observed for advanced argillic alteration (the small size atomic number from La to Dy and then decreasing progres-
of the data set precluded separate treatment of advanced sively to Lu (Fig. 10). In contrast to advanced argillic and
argillic I, II, and III alteration) and intermediate argillic I intermediate argillic I alteration, the depletion of REEs dur-
(Bawone and Binebase) and II (Binebase) alteration (Fig. ing intermediate argillic II alteration was greatest for La and
10). As expected from the mineralogy, the advanced argillic decreased with atomic number to Gd with the exception of
and intermediate argillic I samples were strongly depleted Eu. We consider that the very small additions of the heavy
in the major elements, Mn, Mg, Ca, and Na, moderately rare earth elements (HREEs: Tb, Dy, Ho, Er, Tm, Yb, Lu)
depleted or unchanged in K, weakly depleted in Al and P, reflect uncertainties in the mass transfer calculations and that
and relatively undepleted in Si. Somewhat unexpectedly, these elements were immobile during alteration. The prefer-
however, these samples appear to be enriched in Fe. As py II ential leaching of the light rare earth elements (LREEs: La,
Ce, Pr, Nd) during intermediate argillic II alteration is con-
1.6
sistent with results of experiments showing that the LREEs
BOD are more mobile in chloride-bearing hydrothermal fluids than
BID the HREEs (Migdisov et al., 2009). The reason for the prefer-
Least Altered ential depletion of Eu, Gd, Tb, Dy, and Ho during advanced
argillic and intermediate argillic I alteration is unclear. A pos-
1.2
sible explanation for this anomalous behavior is that depletion
of the LREEs was inhibited because of their incorporation
by sulfates and clay minerals (e.g., Miller et al., 1982; Hopf,
TiO2 (wt. %)

1993; Fulignati et al., 1999; Karakaya, 2009), and that with-


0.8 out this uptake they would have been more depleted, con-
sistent with the experimental predictions (Migdisov et al.,
2009). The differential behavior of the REEs reported above
supports observations from active hydrothermal systems that
0.4
REE chemistry offers a useful tool for distinguishing altera-
tion types (e.g., Michard, 1989; Fulignati et al., 1998, 1999;
Lottermoser, 1992; Lewis et al., 1997; Salan et al., 2011).
Ore mineral composition
0 The compositions of pyrite and enargite were analyzed
40 80 120 160 using a combination of electron microprobe (EMP) and laser
Zr (ppm) ablation-inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry (LA-
ICP-MS). Quantitative electron microprobe analyses for Fe, S,
Fig. 9. Plot showing the distribution of TiO2 and Zr in variably altered
rocks of the Bawone (BOD) and Binebase (BID) deposits. See the text for an Cu, As, Sb, Co, Ni, Zn, Se, and Te were conducted on carbon-
interpretation of the significance of these data. The Pearson correlation coef- coated samples at McGill University using a JEOL 8900 instru-
ficient for both deposits (r) = 0.80. ment equipped with five wavelength dispersive spectrometers
HIGH-SULFIDATION EPITHERMAL PYRITE-HOSTED Au ORE FORMATION, SANGIHE ISLAND, INDONESIA 1719

10

Fe 2O 3
10 1000
Advanced Argillic

K2O
1 SiO 2 100
La Ce Pr Nd Sm Eu Gd Tb Dy Ho Er Tm Yb Lu

P2O 5
Al2O 3 1
0.1 10

MnO

MgO

Na2O
CaO
0.01 1

Rb
Sr
Sn
Sb

Pb
Zn

Ba
Au

As
Ag

Mo
Cu

Co

Bi
Ni

Cs
0.1
0.1

10
Intermediate Argillic I

1000
Fe 2O 3

10
100
1
SiO 2

Al2O 3

10 La Ce Pr Nd Sm Eu Gd Tb Dy Ho Er Tm Yb Lu
P2O 5

1
K2O

0.1
Na2O

1
MnO

Sn

Pb
Zn
Au

As
Ag

Mo

Sr
Cu

Co

Bi
Ni
Sb

Ba
0.01
0.1
CaO
MgO

Cs
Rb
0.1
10
Intermediate Argillic II

1000
10
K2O
Fe 2O 3

100
1
Al2O 3

10 La Ce Pr Nd Sm Eu Gd Tb Dy Ho Er Tm Yb Lu
P2O 5
SiO 2

MnO

MgO

0.1
1
CaO

1
Rb

Cs
Ba
Pb
Zn
Sn
Sb
As

Mo

Bi
Co
Cu
Ag

Ni
Au

0.01
Na2O

0.1
Sr

0.1
Fig. 10. Relative gains and losses of elements for advanced argillically altered rocks from Bawone (red), intermediate
argillically altered I porphyry and crystal tuffs from Bawone and Binebase (yellow) and intermediate argillically II altered
(purple) crystal tuffs from Binebase, calculated using the method of Grant (1986). A value of 1 indicates immobility, less than
1 indicates a relative mass loss and greater than 1 indicates a relative mass gain.

(WDS). The operating conditions were an excitation potential The concentrations of Fe and S determined by EMP analysis
of 20 kV, a beam current of 50 nA and a spot-size of 2 m. were used as an internal standard for the LA-ICP-MS analy-
Analyses were standardized using pyrite (Fe, S), chalcopyrite ses of pyrite and enargite, respectively; GSE-IG, NIST 610
(Cu), AsNiCo (As, Ni, Co), CdTe (Cd, Te), sphalerite (Zn), and Po689 were used as external standards for the analysis of
stibnite (Sb), and AgSe (Se) supplied by CANMET. In addi- pyrite and GSE-1G, PS1 and JB5 for enargite.
tion to quantitative spot analyses, the EMP was also used to Pyrite: The following trace elements were detected in pyrite
produce element maps for Cu, Fe, Se, and As. The operating using the EMP: As, Co, Cu, Ni, Sb, Se, Te, and Zn (Table AI).
conditions were an excitation voltage of 20 kV, an operating LA-ICP-MS analyses yielded results for these elements simi-
current of 90 nA, and a beam diameter of 2m. The counting lar to those obtained with the EMP, and also detected Ag, Au,
time was 30 ms and the pixel size between 0.20 and 1.28 m. Bi, and Pb (Table A2). Copper is the principal trace element
The LA-ICP-MS analyses were conducted at the Geologi- in both generations of pyrite followed by Co, As, and Pb in py
cal Survey of Canada (pyrite) using a Photon Machines Nalyte I or by Co, Pb, and As in py II. Significantly, both generations
193 mm Excimer laser coupled to an Agilent Technologies of pyrite contain ppm levels of Au and Ag.
7700 Series ICP-MS, and at Universit de Chicoutimi (enar- Pyrite I crystals are compositionally unzoned (Fig. 7B) and
gite) using an Excimer Resolution M-50 (Resonetics) Laser have a wide inter- and intra-crystal range of Cu concentrations
coupled to an Agilent 7700x ICP-MS. The concentration of (0.021.5 wt %); the median Cu concentration is 0.44wt%
Fe57, S34, Cu65, Au197, Se77, Te125, Ag107, As75, and Sb121 was and the interquartile range (IQR) is 0.24 to 0.72 wt%. Cobalt
measured in both pyrite and enargite. Pyrite was also ana- concentration is significantly lower, with a median of 62.5ppm
lyzed for Co59, Ni60, Pb208, Zn66, and Bi209. The ablation pits (IQR = 15.6206 ppm). The median As concentration is
ranged from 14 to 54 m in diameter, and the counting time 43.9ppm (IQR = 15.683 ppm) and that of Pb is 59.6 ppm
was 100 s (30 s of background, 70 s of ablation) for pyrite (IQR = 9.579.7 ppm). As mentioned above, py I is aurifer-
and 90 s (30 s for background, 60 s of ablation) for enargite. ous and argentiferous. The median concentrations of Au and
1720 KING ET AL.

Ag are 1.0 ppm (IQR = 0.61.5 ppm) and 9.1 ppm (IQR = zoning was confirmed by quantitative spot analyses of py II,
1.129.6 ppm), respectively. Somewhat surprisingly, the con- which show that there are appreciable compositional varia-
centrations of Se and Te, elements that with As are commonly tions within single crystals.
elevated in auriferous pyrite (e.g., Fleet et al., 1993; Reich et Copper concentrations show the largest variation between
al., 2005), are relatively low with median values of 9.6 ppm growth zones, the distribution of which reveals a complex
(IQR = 6.141.1 ppm) and 3.8 ppm (IQR = 2.210 ppm), history of growth, overgrowth, and resorption (Fig. 12). In
respectively (Table 3). addition to this growth zoning, sector zoning is evident in the
The concentrations of all trace elements detected in py I distribution of Cu (i.e., within single growth zones there are
are higher in py II. The median concentration of Cu in py II sharply defined sectors of higher and lower Cu concentration
is 1.1wt % (IQR = 0.423.4 wt %) and the maximum concen- corresponding to differences in the crystal faces presented).
tration 6.0 wt % (EMP Analysis, Table A1). The median con- The nature of the sector zoning varies considerably with the
centration of Co in py II is 148 ppm (IQR = 48.4533ppm), crystal habit and is most easily observed in drusy crystals (Fig.
that of Pb is 69.9 ppm (IQR = 2.7557 ppm) and that of As is 12).
118ppm (IQR = 16.1417 ppm). Unlike py I, the concentra- Based on electron microprobe analyses, the Cu concentra-
tion of Te is relatively high, with a median value of 31.3ppm tion of individual zones can range from as low as 0.12 to as
(IQR = 11143 ppm) and that of Se is significant, with a high as 6.0 wt %, and vary inversely with the concentration
median of 25.9 ppm (IQR = 12.8102 ppm). The maximum Au of Fe. In some zones, high Cu concentration is matched by
concentration in py II is 13.6 ppm, and the median, 2.4ppm an elevated concentration of As, but in others, the concen-
(IQR = 0.93.2 ppm), and the Ag maximum concentration is trations of the two elements do not correlate positively (Fig.
1,273ppm, and the median, 3.7 ppm (IQR = 1.419 ppm). 12D, F). In addition to As, the concentrations of Ni, Se, and
Although the concentrations of the trace elements, on aver- Te were measured across the transects. All three elements
age, are lower in py I than in py II, the interelement asso- show increases in concentration with elevated Cu concen-
ciations are similar. Binary plots (Fig. 11) and element maps tration. Where the concentrations are consistently above the
(Fig. 12) show that high Au concentrations in py I and II are detection limits, Ni, Se, and Te covary. In some pyrite crystals,
generally associated with elevated Cu, As, Ag, and Te, but Au they covary with Cu, in others with As, and in some crystals,
concentration may be high even if concentrations of these with both.
elements are relatively low; this is especially true for Ag and Further insight into how trace elements in py II covary
Te. Gold concentration is almost entirely independent of Se is provided by LA-ICP-MS depth profiles through crystal
concentration and shows no correlation with Co (or Ni, Sb, growth zones. Overall, the profiles show that zones enriched
Zn, Pb, and Bi, which are not shown) concentration. The in Cu are enriched in all trace elements, although the con-
inter-element correlations for Ag are similar to those for gold, centration of individual elements covaries with some, but not
except that Ag and Te are negatively correlated. all, of the elements analyzed. This is illustrated in Figure 13,
As mentioned above, py II is complexly compositionally which shows the signal intensity (counts) for a suite of ele-
zoned and py I is unzoned. The backscatter electron images ments through three growth zones. From this figure, it is evi-
indicate that this zonation reflects differences in concentra- dent that the concentrations of Au, As, and Te covary (they all
tions of trace elements, mainly of Cu (Fig. 7A). Compositional decrease strongly in the central zone), that Cu, Co, Ni, Zn, Bi,

Table 3. Average Composition of Py I, Py II, and Enargite Based on LA-ICP-MS Analyses

Ag As Au Bi Co Cu Fe Ni Pb S Sb Se Te Zn
(ppm) (ppm) (ppm) (ppm) (ppm) (wt %) (wt %) (ppm) (ppm) (wt %) (ppm) (ppm) (ppm) (ppm)

Py I Mean 33.0 95.4 1.1 10.1 117.1 0.4 59.7 43.1 55.3 53.3 3.7 31.8 10.1 5.8
Median 9.1 43.9 1.0 3.9 62.5 0.3 58.4 33.7 59.6 53.4 3.7 9.6 3.8 2.8
Min 0.3 2.3 d.l. 0.1 0.1 d.l. 52.3 0.5 0.5 51.7 0.3 1.2 0.7 0.6
Max 145.8 467.3 2.5 47.9 404.3 1.5 71.7 182.9 199.8 54.6 11.0 118.6 35.5 22.9
1st quartile 1.1 15.6 0.6 1.0 15.6 0.2 53.1 14.2 9.5 53.4 0.8 6.1 2.2 1.0
3rd quartile 29.6 83.0 1.5 13.3 206.1 0.6 62.5 49.9 79.7 53.4 4.3 41.1 10.0 6.1

Py II Mean 80.6 329.7 3.0 9.4 3,015.6 1.1 48.6 138.3 511.8 52.3 10.7 121.0 218.3 91.7
Median 3.7 117.6 2.4 5.9 148.0 0.6 49.0 40.3 69.9 52.6 3.7 25.9 31.3 6.8
Min d.l. 0.8 d.l. d.l. d.l. d.l. 30.9 0.1 0.1 48.3 0.1 0.7 0.1 0.5
Max 1,273.2 1,636.6 13.6 43.2 21,417.7 4.4 76.1 800.2 7,205.3 55.2 169.6 640.1 1,430.9
1,936.3
1st quartile 1.4 16.1 0.9 3.0 48.4 0.3 40.7 11.8 2.7 52.1 2.2 12.8 11.0 1.1
3rd quartile 19.0 417.2 3.2 13.9 533.6 1.6 54.5 124.2 557.2 53.6 8.7 102.1 142.7 40.4

Enargite
Mean 101.6 13.5 0.5 33.8 0.0 32.7 6,410.8 3.1 141.0
Median 108.5 13.4 0.6 33.2 0.0 32.7 5,527.7 3.2 135.9
Min 31.1 11.8 0.1 24.9 0.0 32.7 4,273.7 1.8 79.5
Max 214.5 15.5 0.8 45.8 0.1 32.7 9,543.1 5.5 211.3
1st quartile 52.7 12.5 0.4 28.8 0.0 32.7 4,876.6 2.6 95.1
3rd quartile 114.9 14.2 0.7 37.2 0.1 32.7 8,167.5 3.4 188.9

Note: See digital Appendices 1 to 4 for raw data


HIGH-SULFIDATION EPITHERMAL PYRITE-HOSTED Au ORE FORMATION, SANGIHE ISLAND, INDONESIA 1721

10-2 10-2
Pyrite I
Pyrite II

As (afu)
Aa (afu)
10-4 10-4

10-6 10-6
10-1 10-1

Cu (afu)
Cu (afu)

10-3 10-3

10-5 10-5

10-3 10-3

Te (afu)
Te (afu)

10-5 10-5

10-7 10-7
10-3 10-5

Sb (afu)
Se (afu)

10-5
10-5

10-7

10-7
10-1
10-4
10-3
Ag (afu)

10
Co (afu)
-5

10-5
10-6

10-7 10-7

10-9 10-8 10-7 10-6 10-8 10-7 10-6 10-5 10-4

Au (afu) Ag (afu)
Fig. 11. Binary plots of trace element concentration in pyrite analyzed by LA-ICP-MS and shown in atoms per formula
unit (afu).

and Se covary and do so independently of Au, As, and Te, and = 18.118.8 wt %), a median S concentration of 32.8 wt %
that Ag and Pb covary independently of the other two groups (IQR = 32.733.0 wt %) and a median Cu concentration of
of elements. It should be noted, however, that these group- 48.6wt% (IQR = 48.148.8wt %). The trace element con-
ings are not observed in all crystals. For example, Te behaves centrations were analyzed by a combination of EMP and LA-
independently of Au and As in some crystals and covaries with ICP-MS methods, and predictably, Sb was the trace element
Se in others. Nonetheless, the Cu group of Cu, Ni, and Co with the highest concentration with a median of 5527 ppm
generally covaries independently of the Au group of Au, As, (IQR = 48768167 ppm; Tables 3, A4). This is well below its
and Te (Se). Silver concentration is usually decoupled from concentration in stibioenargite (Springer, 1969; Maske and
those of both Au and Cu, and commonly covaries with Pb, Bi Skinner, 1971; Posfai and Buseck, 1998). Iron is the next
and, rarely, Se concentration. most important trace element with a median concentration of
Enargite: On the basis of quantitative EMP analyses 316 ppm (IQR = 117649 ppm), followed by Te and Se, with
(Table A3), enargite has close to an end member composi- median concentrations of 135 ppm (IQR = 95.1189 ppm)
tion with a median As concentration of 18.5 wt % (IQR and 3.2ppm (IQR = 2.63.4 ppm), respectively (Table 3). The
1722 KING ET AL.

BSE Images Cu map


A B

Composite element maps


C D

Arsenic
Copper
Iron
E F

Arsenic
Copper
Iron

G H
Selenium
Copper
Iron
HIGH-SULFIDATION EPITHERMAL PYRITE-HOSTED Au ORE FORMATION, SANGIHE ISLAND, INDONESIA 1723

Au content is significantly lower than that of py I or py II, with Table 4. Sulfur Isotope Compositions of Py I and Py II
a median of 0.6 ppm (IQR = 0.40.7 ppm), but the median from the Bawone and Binebase Deposits
silver content is significantly higher than that of either gen- Samples 33S 34S 36S
eration of Py (108 ppm, IQR = 52.7114.9 ppm). From BSE
images, the enargite appears to be unzoned (Fig. 8C), but LA- BID16-66.3 PyI 2.94 5.73 10.82
ICP-MS depth profiles show small variations in the signals of BOD3-81.5 PyII 2.54 4.93 9.59
BOD1-99.4 PyI 2.48 4.86 9.39
some trace elements and Cu (Fig. 13). Despite the presence
of a number of trace elements in significant concentration in
Note: The full analytical uncertainty (1s) for sulfur isotope analysis is
the enargite, none of them display a systematic correlation estimated to be 0.13 for 34S values, based on the long-term standard
with another trace element. deviation for repeat analyses of in-house standards

Sulfur Isotopes
Isotopic compositions of pyrite and sulfate (alunite and bar- Discussion
ite) were measured to better understand the physiocochemi-
cal conditions of ore formation. In particular, they were used Geologic setting
to estimate temperature and assist in the interpretation of fO2 The Bawone and Binebase deposits occur at the southeast-
and pH conditions. ern end of a young volcanic island with an active volcano to
the northwest and a chain of extinct/dormant volcanic edifices
Method
to the south. Both deposits are hosted by rocks of the Bine-
Because it is impossible to physically separate the fine- base Group, a thick andesitic sequence of alternating, inter-
grained, intergrown pyrite and alunite, separation was bedded porphyritic lava flows or epiclastic deposits and crystal
achieved chemically in two stages. In the first stage, finely tuffs that were probably deposited in close proximity to a vol-
ground altered rock was reacted with a Cr-reducing solu- canic center. If, as seems likely, a volcano was located above
tion to liberate H2S from the sulfides (Canfield et al., 1986). the Binebase and Bawone deposits (and was thus close to the
This procedure stripped the sample of sulfide, allowing the coast), its erosion would have been very rapid due to a combi-
solid residue to be filtered and reacted with Thodes solution nation of rising sea level (as indicated by the marine deposits
(Thode et al., 1961) to convert the remaining sulfur (sulfate) of the overlying Pinterang Formation), thermal subsidence as
to H2S. In both cases, the resulting H2S was trapped using a the magmatic center moved northwest, and the hot, wet trop-
zinc-acetate solution and reacted with a solution of AgNO3 ical climate. Consequently, all traces of the volcanic edifice
to produce solid Ag2S that was purified and reacted with SF6 could have disappeared in tens of thousands of years.
(Thode and Rees, 1979) prior to introduction into a Thermo
Finnigan MAT 253 dual-inlet gas-source mass spectrometer Paleodepth and pressure
at McGill University for measurement of sulfur isotope ratios, A very crude, approximate estimate of the depth and pres-
with IAEA-S-1 as an internal standard (Sharman, 2011). The sure of emplacement of the Bawone and Binebase deposits
ratios are reported relative to V-CDT in notation. can be made by comparing their current elevation to that of
the base of the crater of Awu volcano, the only active volcano
Results
on Sangihe Island. This assumes that the volcano overlying
Two samples of argillically and advanced argillically altered these deposits reached an elevation similar to that of Awu vol-
material and one sample of pyrite and barite from the late cano, and although this cannot be known, it is suggested by the
barite-enargite veins were selected for sulfur isotope analysis crater elevation of the somewhat larger dormant/extinct Kaki-
(Table 4). The sulfate concentration in the preliminary analy- raeng volcano located immediately to the west of the deposits.
sis was below the detection limit but consistent 34S values The elevation of the crater of this volcano is 1,006 m (it has
were obtained for pyrite. The 33S, 34S, and 36S per mil val- likely been reduced in height due to erosion), whereas that
ues for pyrite average 2.65 ( 1s = 0.25), 5.17 ( 1s = 0.48), of the crater of Awu volcano is 1,327 m (Fig. 1). By contrast,
and 9.93 ( 1s = 0.77), respectively. The standard deviations the Bawone and Binebase deposits are exposed at elevations
are small considering that the pyrite represents different gen- of 86 and 65 m, respectively. Thus, if the crater of the volcano
erations of mineralization. above the deposits was at an elevation similar to those of Awu

Fig. 12. BSE images (A, C, E, G) and corresponding copper map (B) or composite Cu (green), Fe (blue) and As/Se (red)
maps (D, F, H) showing strong sector and growth zoning in py II. Brighter colors correspond to higher concentrations of the
given element. (A) BSE image of complex, m-scale, strongly growth zoned drusy pyrite overgrowing massive, porous pyrite,
also zoned. (B) Cu map of the same crystal, light blue-green represents higher Cu concentration; the darker the blue, the
lower is the Cu concentration. The growth zoning is perpendicular to the crystal growth direction and records the primary
growth history (50 m scale). (C, D) Drusy, py II with growth and sector zones and very high Cu concentrations (green)
and variably As-rich (red) bands transitioning outward into massive, porous py II with lower Cu concentration and isolated
zones of As enrichment (scale bar is 50 m). (E, F) Cross section is through a euhedral py II crystal displaying growth zoning
with alternating As (red) and Cu (green) enriched bands. Sector zoning most strongly evident as a Cu enrichment on three
equivalent faces about a three-fold axis (scale bar is 500 m). (G, H) Drusy py II crystals displaying complex growth zoning in
either Cu (green) or Se (red) bands. Sector zoning in Cu is also present in the form of a cross at the center of a cubic pyrite
grain, top-center (scale bar is 500 m).
1724 KING ET AL.

Growth Zone 1 Growth Zone 2 Growth Zone 3

Co59
1 000 000
Fe57
Cu65

100 000 S34

10 000 Ni60
Signal Intensity (counts)

As75
Se77
1000 Te125
Bi209
Sb121 Au197
100 Zn66

Ag107
10 Pb208

50 100 150 200 250


Time (s)
Fig. 13. An example of a depth profile through three growth zones of a py II crystal produced by LA-ICP-MS, in counts vs.
time (depth) for major and trace elements. Arsenic, Te, and Au covary through the three growth zones and are independent
of Co, Cu, Ni, Zn, Se, and Bi, whereas Ag, Pb, and to some extent Sb covary independently of the other two groups.

and Kakiraeng volcanoes, it follows that the deposits formed alteration (Figs. 14, 15). The total S concentration was assumed
at depths of approximately 900 to 1,300 m below the paleo- to be 0.01 m, consistent with that inferred for other high-sul-
vent. These depths fall within the range of depths estimated fidation epithermal systems (e.g., Muntean et al., 1990). At a
for other high-sulfidation epithermal deposits (Jannas et al., pH below 2, aluminum is mobile, an observation confirmed by
1990; Arribas, 1995; Cooke and Simmons, 2000). The depths our mass balance calculations that provides evidence for local
inferred for Bawone and Binebase (9001,300m) correspond Al mobility. For these conditions, Al activity was assumed to be
to lithostatic pressures of 250 to 350 bars or hydrostatic pres- 0.1 (Knight, 1977; Fulignati et al., 1999). At higher pH, Al was
sures of 90 to 125 bars (assuming the water table was near the assumed to be immobile and its activity buffered by the alumi-
paleosurface), respectively. As much of the mineralization is num silicate minerals (Stoffregen, 1987; Salvi et al., 1998).The
disseminated and there is no evidence of large through-going Na/K ratio was taken to be 10, assuming equilibrium between
fractures that might have intersected the paleosurface, pres- natroalunite and alunite (natroalunite and alunite commonly
sure was probably intermediate between the two extremes. In occur together but their textural relationships could not be
the discussion that follows, we therefore assume that the pres- determined because of the very fine-grained nature of the
sure accompanying hydrothermal alteration and gold mineral- rock), and the conclusion that alunite transformed to natroal-
ization was ~200 bars. unite at a temperature of ~275C (see below). Oxygen fugac-
ity was inferred from the 34S values for pyrite to be that of
Temperature and pH the hematite-magnetite buffer (see below). The activities of
Earlier, we showed that advanced argillic (AA) and inter- Fe and Si were assumed to have been buffered by pyrite and
mediate argillic (IA) alteration in the Bawone and Binebase quartz, respectively, which are ubiquitous in the deposits.
deposits are characterized by the following mineral associa- At the conditions for which Figures 14 and 15 were con-
tions: AA I (quartz + pyrite + pyrophyllite natroalunite), AA structed, pyrite is stable above 250C (hematite is stable
II (quartz + pyrite natroalunite dickite kaolinite), AA III below 250C), making this the lower temperature limit for all
(quartz + pyrite + kaolinite + alunite), IA I (quartz + kaolinite alteration facies. Because kaolinite and quartz react to form
pyrite dickite), and IA II (quartz + illite pyrite). Here, we pyrophyllite at temperatures greater than 280C (Fig. 15), the
use stability relationships among these minerals in the system coexistence of quartz and kaolinite in AA II, AA III, and IA
Al-Si-O-K-Na-Fe-H-S to make inferences about the tempera- I alteration zones constrains their temperatures to have been
ture and pH of the fluids responsible for the different types of less than 280C. Conversely, the presence of pyrophyllite in
HIGH-SULFIDATION EPITHERMAL PYRITE-HOSTED Au ORE FORMATION, SANGIHE ISLAND, INDONESIA 1725

400

-
4

SO 2-
HSO

4
And

350
Py Mag
Na-Al Pyr

300
1 2 3
Musc Albite

4 5 Microcline
T (C)

250
Hem
Fe2+

Al Kao
Range of alteration
200 conditions
AA I fields 1 & 2
AA II field 1
AA III fields 4 & 5
150
IA I field 5

IA II field 3
100
0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14
pH
Fig. 14. Stability relationships among minerals in the K-Na-Al-Si-O-H and Fe-S-O systems as a function of temperature
and pH. Also shown are the fields of stability of the five main alteration facies (shaded areas), advanced argillic I (AA I),
advanced argillic II (AA II), advanced argillic III (AA III), intermediate argillic I (IA I), and intermediate argillic II (IA II).
The diagram was calculated for 200 bar (SVP), log fO2 = 30, quartz saturation, Na+/K+ = 10, aS = 0.01 and aAl3+ = 0.1 (see
text for details). Silicate and sulfate species are shown by solid lines, Fe species by dashed lines and sulfur species by dotted
lines. The model was calculated using SULF34 (Zhang, 1993) and The Geochemists Workbench (GW; Bethke, 2005) with
thermodynamic data from Holland and Powell (1998), Stoffregen et al. (2000), Helgeson (1978), Robie and Hemingway
(1995), and Johnson et al. (1992).

the AA I alteration zone indicates that this alteration occurred the IA II alteration association includes pyrite, this alteration
at a temperature above 275C (Holland, 1998). Natroalunite occurred at >250C and, although we cannot constrain the
is the stable form of the alunite group minerals in the AA I upper temperature from its mineralogy, it is reasonable to
alteration zone, and alunite is the stable form in the AA III conclude that this limit was less than or similar to that for IA I
alteration zone. Unexpectedly, however, given the coexistence alteration, i.e., 275C.
of quartz and kaolinite (implying a temperature less than On the basis of the stability relationships illustrated in Fig-
280C), natroalunite is also the stable member of the alunite ure 14, specifically the presence of both natroalunite and
family in the AA II alteration zone. We interpret this to indi- pyrophyllite in the AA I association, natroalunite and kaolin-
cate that AA II alteration occurred at ~280C, an interpreta- ite/dickite in the AA II association, and alunite and kaolinite in
tion that is supported by the presence of dickite in the AA II the AA III association, we interpret the pH of advanced argil-
alteration zone (kaolinite is widely inferred to convert to dick- lic alteration to have been ~2.5. In principle, the pH could
ite above 150C: Hemley et al., 1969; Stoffregen and Alpers, have been significantly lower, if natroalunite and pyrophyllite
1987; Stoffregen and Cygan, 1990). In view of the distribution or alunite and kaolinite were not in equilibrium (Hemley and
of alunite group minerals among the AAI, AAII, and AAIII Jones, 1964; Knight, 1977). If, however, the pH was below 2,
zones, we conclude that alunite was replaced by natroalunite aluminum would have been highly mobile (Stoffregen, 1987),
at ~275C. which based on our analysis of mass changes (Fig. 10) was not
An upper temperature limit for AA I alteration is provided the case; aluminum experienced only minor depletion. This
by the absence of andalusite, which forms from the reaction of supports a conclusion that the pH was at least 2 and more
pyrophyllite and quartz at ~340C (Figs. 14, 15). In summary, likely 2.5. The presence of kaolinite in the IA I alteration
we conclude that AA I alteration occurred at a temperature association constrains its pH to between 2.5 and 4, and the
between 275 and 340C, AA II alteration at ~275C, and AA presence of illite, but absence of K-feldspar and albite in the
III and IA I alteration at between about 250 and 275C. As IA II association, constrains its pH to between ~4 and 6.
1726 KING ET AL.

A -20
250C 15

HSO4-
SO42-
AlSO4+
-25 Al Kao Musc Microcline 10

log fO2 (HM)


log fO2
-30 5
Hem

34H
S= -1 Mag
2
0
-35 34H 0
2 S = -1
Py
34H
2 S= -5

H 2S
HS-
Fe 2+
Pr
-40
0 2 4 6 8
pH
B -20 10

HSO4-
AlSO4+ 300C

SO42-
Na-Al Pyr Musc Albite
-25

log fO2 (HM)


5
SO2

Hem
log fO2

-30 Mag 0
34H
S= -1
Py
2
0
34H
2 S= -1
34H
2 S= -5

-35 -5
H 2S
HS-

Fe+2 Pr
-40
0 2 4 6 8
pH
Fig. 15. Log fO2-pH diagrams showing stability relationships for minerals in the K-Na-Al-Si-O-H and Fe-S-O systems (A)
at 250C, and (B) at 300C. The diagrams were created assuming a pressure of 200 bar (SVP), quartz saturation, Na+/K+ = 10,
aS = 0.01 and aAl3+ = 0.1 (see text for details). Silicates and sulfate species are shown by solid lines, Fe-species by dashed lines
and sulfur species by dotted lines. The red lines are 34SH2S contours at 1, 5 (the measured 34S value for Sangihe pyrite)
and 10, and constrain the range of log fO2 values for Au-Ag mineralization to approximately 32 (Fig 16A) and 27 (Fig 16B)
assuming a pH of 2.5 (see text for details). The term Dlog fO2 (HM) refers to the number of log units of fO2 above or below that
of the hematite-magnetite buffer (calculated using The Geochemists Workbench).

fO2 Hedenquist et al., 1998b; Bethke et al., 2005; Deyell et al.,


Ore-forming high-sulfidation epithermal systems are char- 2005a, b; Fifarek and Rye, 2005; Taylor, 2007), the S34S value
of the fluid would have been approximately zero. Using this
acteristically oxidizing, with oxygen fugacity straddling or just
assumption, it is possible to calculate the 34S of the fluid from
below that of the hematite-magnetite buffer. For example, val- the measured pyrite 34S values and, in turn, calculate log fO2
ues for log fO2 (HM) reported for some other high-sulfidation for given pH values (Zhang, 1993). The negative 34S values
deposits have ranges of 4.24 to 1.32 (Thiersch et al., 1997), calculated for reduced sulfur (H2S) at Bawone and Binebase,
2.4 to 0.07 (Muntean et al., 1990) and <2.5 (Voudouris, 2011). assuming a temperature between 250 and 340C, are simi-
If the sulfur source were dominantly magmatic, which is con- lar to those of other high-sulfidation deposits (Muntean et
sidered to be the case for most high-sulfidation deposits (e.g., al., 1990; Hedenquist et al., 1994; Voudouris, 2010), and are
Muntean et al., 1990; Rye et al., 1992; Rye, 1993; Arribas, 1995; consistent with sulfur isotope fractionation between sulfides/
HIGH-SULFIDATION EPITHERMAL PYRITE-HOSTED Au ORE FORMATION, SANGIHE ISLAND, INDONESIA 1727

sulfosalts and sulfates in an oxidizing environment (Arribas, For example, Migdisov and Williams-Jones (2013) and Hur-
1995; Cooke and Simmons, 2000). The log fO2 (HM) values tig and Williams-Jones (2014) have shown that HCl-bearing
corresponding to the 34SH2S values for advanced and interme- aqueous gases can dissolve ppm levels of Ag and Au, respec-
diate argillic alteration are between 4 and 1 (Fig. 15; Table 5; tively, at temperatures as low as 400C. They have shown,
Rye, 1993, 2005; Cooke and Simmons, 2000). moreover, that the solubility of these metals increases expo-
nentially with increasing f H2O. At the temperature and pres-
Metal transport sure predicted for the formation of the Bawone and Binbase
According to many researchers, there is a hyper-acidic deposits, i.e., close to those of the H2O vapor-liquid boundary,
ground preparatory or pre-ore stage of hydrothermal alter- conditions would have been optimal for the transport of gold
ation in high-sulfidation epithermal systems that precedes gold and silver by magmatic vapor.
mineralization and results in advanced argillic alteration (Stof- Direct evidence that condensed gases in environments
fregen, 1987; Hedenquist et al., 1994, 1998, 2000; Arribas, analogous to those of high-sulfidation epithermal deposits
1995). There is also a consensus among these researchers that can transport significant concentrations of metals is provided
the extreme acidity required to produce the advanced argillic by Kawah Ijen, an active volcano in eastern Java, Indonesia.
alteration that characterizes this ground preparation stage can There, advanced argillic alteration (and residual silica altera-
only be explained by interaction of the rocks with a condensed tion) is ongoing and accompanied by the crystallization of
acidic vapor (e.g., Hedenquist et al., 1994, 2000). At Bawone pyrite enriched in Cu, Ag, and Au (Scher et al., 2013). The
and Binebase, the alteration does not reflect interaction with fluid responsible for this alteration is a condensed magmatic
fluids having the extreme acidity of some high-sulfidation gas with a pH <1 containing ppm concentrations of Cu and
epithermal systems (residual vuggy silica is not observed). As (the concentrations of Au and Ag are below the level of
Nonetheless, the very low pH of ~2.5 estimated for the fluid detection). Although the concentrations of Cu, Ag, and Au
requires that it was a liquid condensed from gas, as other fluids in the Kawah Ijen pyrite are much lower than those in the
that might have been present in the system, such as meteoric pyrite at Bawone and Binebase (because of the much lower
water/groundwater, seawater and magmatic liquid would have pressure and hence density of the gas), the metal ratios, e.g.,
had higher pH (Stoffregen and Alpers, 1987; Meyer and Hem- Cu/Au and Ag/Au are very similar to those of the two Sangihe
ley, 1967; Hemley et al., 1969; Stoffregen, 1987; White, 1957). Island deposits (Fig. 16). We can therefore conclude that the
Because advanced argillic alteration involved crystallization of two pyrite occurrences likely formed by the same process and
auriferous and argentiferous pyrite (pyrite I) and this pyrite that the fluid which transported the ore metals in the Bawone
accounts for between 30 and 50% of the hypogene Au (Ag-Cu) and Binebase deposits was therefore a magmatic gas. Several
mineralization in the Bawone and Binebase deposits, it there- other ore deposit studies have also documented gold mineral-
fore follows that much of the gold and the other metals were ization associated with early advanced argillic alteration (e.g.,
introduced into the deposits by this condensed gas. Whether Muntean et al., 1990; Voudouris, 2011).
or not pyrite II and enargite, which were introduced later, also
crystallized from this condensed gas is less clear but given the Ore deposition
similar trace element and isotopic compositions of pyrite I and For the reasons presented above, we propose that the fluid
II, it is a strong possibility. There were also likely multiple iter- responsible for the formation of the Bawone and Binebase
ations of this process as porosity was created and subsequently deposits was a condensed magmatic gas. However, we con-
filled by alteration products (Berger and Henley, 2011). sider it likely that this gas encountered a physicochemical
Evidence that metals can be transported in high concentra- barrier, such as the water table or an impermeable cap rock.
tions in magmatic vapors has been provided by analyses of the This seems to have been the case for the deeper mineraliza-
compositions of vapor inclusions, which have yielded poten- tion at Bawone (Figs. 3A, 6A), as the gas condensed to a low-
tially ore-forming concentrations of some metals, including pH liquid from which the ore mineral (pyrite) precipitated
ppm levels of Au and Ag (Audtat et al., 1998, 2008; Ulrich et or formed by replacement of primary iron-bearing minerals.
al., 1999; Williams-Jones and Heinrich, 2005; Seo et al., 2009). According to this interpretation, the ore metals were trans-
In addition to the fluid inclusion data, there is also a growing ported in the vapor as hydrated species, e.g., MeCl-H2O or
body of evidence from experiments that Au, Ag and Cu can be MeHS-H2O (Migdisov et al., 1999; Williams-Jones and Hein-
transported in appreciable concentrations in aqueous vapor rich, 2005; Zezin et al., 2011b; Migdisov and Williams-Jones,
(Migdisov et al., 1999; Archibald et al., 2001, 2002; Migdisov 2013; Hurtig and Williams-Jones, 2014), whereas after con-
and Williams-Jones, 2013; Hurtig and Williams-Jones, 2014). densation of the vapor to liquid, they would have been trans-
ported as charged or neutral aqueous species like MeCl2 or
MeHSo (Crerar and Barnes, 1976; Gammons and Barnes,
Table 5. Physicochemical Conditions for Each Alteration Facies Based 1989; Zotov et al., 1990; Gammons and Williams-Jones, 1997;
on Stability Relationships Among Minerals and 34S Values for Py I and Py
II Mountain and Seward, 2003; Stefnsson and Seward, 2004;
Williams-Jones et al., 2009).
T pH log fO2 log fO2 (HM buffer) If saturation of the fluid with the metal had occurred, ore
deposition would have been controlled by reactions such as
IA I 260275 34 34 to 31 +1 to +3
IA II >265 46 35 to 33 1 to +2
the following:
AA I 275330 0.54 28 to 27 +2 to +4 Au(HS)o + H2O(l) = Au(s) + H2S + O2 (1)
AA II 270275 0.54 28 to 27 +1 to +4
AA III 250270 0.54 33 to 32 +1 to +3 AuCl2 +
+ H2O(l) = Au(s) + 2Cl + H + O2(g) (2)
1728 KING ET AL.

Pyrite (Scher et al., 2013) is adsorbed at a pH <5 (Widler and Seward, 2002). Pyrite can
Pyrite I also have positively charged faces if arsenic bearing (Favorov
1000 Pyrite II et al., 1974), but the effects of Cu on the surface properties of
pyrite are unknown.
As (ppm)

100 Pyrite I is an integral part of advanced and intermediate


argillic alteration, and accounts for 30 to 50% of the gold in
10 the Bawone deposit and in the hypogene part of the Bine-
base deposit with an median concentration of 1.0 ppm Au;
1
the median concentrations of Ag and Cu are 9.1 ppm and
0.44wt%, respectively. The texturally complex pyrite II con-
tains median values of 2.4 ppm Au, 3.7 ppm Ag, and 1.1 wt %
Cu, and accounts for most of the remaining gold. Some gold
and even more silver are present in enargite (median values of
1000 0.6 ppm Au and 108 ppm Ag).
Insights into the conditions favorable for the uptake of gold
by pyrite in the Bawone and Binebase deposits are afforded
Cu (ppm)

100
by the presence of both growth and sector zoning in pyrite
II. The latter zoning reflects differences in the concentrations
10
of elements on two nonequivalent faces within single growth
zones, and enables partition coefficients to be calculated
1 for these faces, which record the relative changes in physi-
cochemical conditions during crystal growth (van Hinsberg
and Schumacher, 2007). We have used analyses of sector and
growth zones in pyrite II to determine the conditions favor-
1000 able for the incorporation of gold and other trace elements
into pyrite. The element concentrations in two adjacent
100
nonequivalent faces were measured for a series of growth
Ag (ppm)

10 zones and the partition coefficients (Kd) were calculated. We


observed that the highest gold concentrations coincided with
1 periods of growth marked by relatively constant Kd, and lower
0.1
gold values coincided with sharp increases and decreases in
the Kd (Fig. 17). Thus, in contrast to mineralization produced
0.01 by saturation of an ore mineral, which is favored by rapid
changes in the physicochemical conditions due to processes
like mixing and boiling, concentration of gold in the Bawone
0.0001 0.001 0.01 0.1 1 10 and Binebase deposits was favored when physicochemical
Au (ppm) conditions were relatively stable.
Fig. 16. Log-log plots comparing the trace element composition of py I
and py II with that of pyrite from an active high-sulfidation epithermal system Incorporation of trace elements in pyrite
at Kawah Ijen volcano (Scher et al., 2013). From these plots, it is evident that Unlike many examples of deposits of invisible gold, the
the ratios, Cu/Au and Ag/Au of py I and py II, and particularly the Ag/Au ratio
of py I, are broadly similar to those of Kawah Ijen pyrite.
pyrite in the Bawone and Binebase deposits contains only
trace quantities of As (Tables 3, A1, A2). Despite this low
concentration of As relative to that in auriferous pyrite from
However, as native gold does not occur in the deposits, other deposits (e.g., Reich et al., 2005), Au concentration cor-
instead, the gold occurs with other metals as nanoparticles in relates positively with the concentration of As (Figs. 11, 13,
pyrite or within the structure of this mineral, it follows that 16); the latter is a hundred times greater than the concentra-
gold was undersaturated in the liquid. tion of Au in py I and py II. This correlation suggests that
Deposition of gold and other metals is interpreted to have Au + As substituted for Fe, as has been proposed previously
occurred as a result of their adsorption onto the faces of pyrite for other deposits containing gold hosted in pyrite (Cook and
during crystal growth. This deposition began at the onset of Chryssoulis, 1990; Fleet et al., 1993; Huston et al., 1995). It
advanced argillic alteration with the precipitation of pyrite I is also possible, however, that some or all of the gold occurs
and continued with the precipitation of pyrite II. Adsorption as nanoparticles within the pyrite. Although our data do not
of gold onto pyrite has been proposed previously as a mecha- allow us to determine whether the gold was incorporated into
nism to explain the occurrence of invisible gold in other epi- the pyrite structure or is present as nanoparticles, Reich et al.
thermal deposits (e.g., Simon et al., 1999; Wilder and Seward, (2005) have observed that in pyrite with Au/As > 0.02, gold
2002; Pals et al., 2003). It also has been investigated experi- occurs as microinclusions, whereas if the ratio is less than this,
mentally at ambient pressure and temperature for pH values it is substituted into the pyrite structure. The average Au/As
from 2 to 10. Results of these experiments for pyrite having for pyrite in the Bawone and Binebase deposits is 0.019, sug-
negatively charged crystal faces show that over 90% of the gesting that much of the gold may have been incorporated in
gold in solution (undersaturated with respect to native gold) the structure of this mineral.
HIGH-SULFIDATION EPITHERMAL PYRITE-HOSTED Au ORE FORMATION, SANGIHE ISLAND, INDONESIA 1729

16.79 Kd
Cu light
Au (ppm)

4
3

11.46 12.22
3

Cu (wt %)
2
Kd

1
1

2.65 2.23

0 0

0 20 40 60 80 100
Distance
Fig. 17. A plot showing the variation in the partition coefficient (Kd; black line) and the concentration of Cu (red line)
as a function of the distance (in percent) from the core to the rim of a single pyrite crystal (BID34-84). In this plot, the Kd
corresponds to the ratio of the Cu concentration in one sector zone (the one with the higher overall Cu concentration, i.e.,
the light zone in BSE images, e.g., Fig. 13) to the Cu concentration in the adjacent sector zone (the dark zone), within
the same growth zone. The Kd is inferred to vary inversely with temperature following van Hinsberg and Schumacher (2007).
The yellow squares represent gold concentrations analyzed by LA-ICP-MS, with the width of the square corresponding to
the diameter of the pit in relation to the growth zones. The vertical scale on the right hand side of the diagram indicates the
Cu concentration. The highest gold concentrations correspond to regions where the Kd is stable, whereas lower gold concen-
trations correspond to intervals over which there is a rapid change in Kd values; Cu concentrations show the same behavior.

Incorporation of Au in the pyrite structure is also favored Viejo (Huston et al., 1995; Oberthr et al., 1997; Deditius et
by the presence of Te, which substitutes for the smaller S al., 2011). However, there is no agreed upon mechanism to
ion, thereby expanding the lattice and providing space for the explain the rare and anomalous Cu concentrations in pyrite.
large Au ion (Chouinard et al., 2005a; Bi et al., 2011). The Some studies have shown that Cu-rich pyrite is the result of
presence of appreciable Te (concentrations of Te are tens (py recrystallization of Cu-phases (Pacevski et al., 2008). This was
I) to a hundred (py II) times greater than that of Au) and its not the case at Bawone and Binebase because of the well-
positive correlation with Au (Fig. 14) suggests that this substi- documented zoning that records the growth history of the
tution was also important in the uptake of Au. crystals (Fig. 12). Other researchers have suggested oxidation
Although the As concentration in pyrite II is low compared of aqueous Cu+ and direct substitution of Cu2+ for Fe2+ (e.g.,
to that of auriferous pyrite elsewhere, the Cu concentration is Chouinard et al., 2005a; Pacevski et al., 2008) accompanied by
anomalously high, up to 6 wt % Cu (Abraitis et al., 2004). Sig- the incorporation of other trace elements that cause distortion
nificantly, most of the other examples of auriferous pyrite with of the lattice (e.g., Radcliff and McSween, 1970). Whatever
high copper contents are also from high-sulfidation epithermal the mechanism, it seems likely that the highly oxidizing condi-
deposits, e.g., Pascua Lama (up to 1.5 wt % Cu; Chouinard tions that are characteristic of high-sulfidation deposits play a
et al., 2005a), Pueblo Viejo (up to 3.0 wt % Cu; Deditius et role in the incorporation of Cu in the pyrite structure.
al., 2011) and Chelopech (up to 4.5 wt % Cu; Pacevski et al.,
2008). Moreover, the exceptions, such as pyrite from the Coka Genetic model
Marin polymetallic deposit (up to 8 wt % Cu; Pacevski et al., We propose that the metals forming the Bawone and Bine-
2008) have many characteristics of high-sulfidation deposits. base deposits originated from a relatively oxidized magma that
It has been shown that copper can be incorporated in was emplaced at high crustal levels and exsolved a low den-
the pyrite structure both as nanoparticles and by substitu- sity supercritical fluid (that subsequently evolved to vapor)
tion for Fe, even within a single ore deposit such as Peublo into which metals (including Au, Ag, and Cu) partitioned
1730 KING ET AL.

preferentially. The gold and other metals were transported conduits (Al and particularly Si experienced only minor deple-
as hydrated species that ascended through the volcanic pile tion; Fig. 10). Iron and many trace elements, except for the
via fractures and zones of enhanced permeability to depths REE, Rb and Cs, were enriched, in some cases by orders of
between 900 and 1,300 m, where the vapor condensed at tem- magnitude, relative to their original abundance.
peratures between 250 and 340C to form an acidic liquid Auriferous py II was deposited in veins and in open space
with a pH of ~2.5; fO2 ranged up to four log units above the created by mineral dissolution. These same veins were frac-
hematite-magnetite buffer. tured and the fractures filled by barite and enargite. Rare, late
The acidic condensate altered the host andesite, replac- auriferous (electrum) barite-base metal (sphalerite and chal-
ing primary mafic minerals, such as hornblende, biotite, and copyrite) veins formed at Binebase.
magnetite, with auriferous py I (sulfidation), and converting Py I, which is associated with advanced and intermediate
feldspars to an advanced argillic alteration association that argillic alteration, and py II, precipitated under conditions
includes kaolinite, pyrophyllite, alunite, natroalunite, and for which metals, including gold, were undersaturated in
dickite. If fluids had been previously neutralized by reactions the fluid. The metals, i.e., Au, Ag, and Cu, were adsorbed
with rocks or fluid/rock ratios were lower, the alteration led onto the surfaces of the growing pyrite crystals and incorpo-
to an intermediate argillic I alteration association of kaolin- rated in the pyrite either as a solid solution or as nanopar-
ite, quartz, and pyrite, and a distal intermediate argillic II ticles. Some gold and silver were incorporated in enargite by
alteration association of illite, quartz, and pyrite. The altera- the same mechanisms (Fig. 18). The Bawone and Binbase
tion also created porosity through the dissolution of minerals. deposits were subsequently exhumed and partially oxidized,
During alteration, all major elements, except for Zr and Ti creating an upper zone of supergene-enriched oxide ore and
were depleted proximal to the main alteration/mineralization deeper lower-grade hypogene ores.

AuHS . nH2O
Impermeable
H2 SO42-
AuHSo Impermeable H2 SO42-
AuCl2- H 2O
AuCl2-
Cu Cu
AuHS . nH2O
CuHS . nH2O Advanced Argillic
Cu
Pyrite
AuCl2 nH2O
.
Au
Py II Ba-En veins
AgCl . nH2O
H 2S SO2 AuHSo
CO2 H 2O CuHS. nH2O
Argillic

A B C

Fig. 18. A cartoon cross section through the stratovolcano that may have hosted the Bawone and Binebase gold deposits.
Moderately dipping flows and volcaniclastic units with variable porosity and permeability are crosscut by structures that
permitted transfer of heat and fluids (red) upward. The latter caused hydrothermal alteration of the adjacent rocks (pink).
Some of the conduits vented at the surface, producing solfataras, whereas others terminated at impermeable barriers, such as
the welded andesite tuff in the Bawone deposit, or at perched water tables corresponding to permeable and less permeable/
impermeable layers. The small circle in the cross section indicates the location of the large circles, labeled A to C. Circle A
illustrates the transport of the metals as hydrated species in magmatic vapor rising through the volcanic pile and condensing at
an impermeable boundary. Circle B shows the distribution of rocks altered by highly acidic condensed vapor, and the accom-
panying pyrite-hosted gold (copper, silver) mineralization. Finally, Circle C depicts a pyrite crystal with two types of faces
onto which copper and gold adsorbed preferentially from a gold-undersaturated condensed vapor to produce gold (copper,
silver)-rich sector- and growth-zoned pyrite II. Multiple iterations of this process are likely required to produce an economic
high-sulfidation deposit of this style.
HIGH-SULFIDATION EPITHERMAL PYRITE-HOSTED Au ORE FORMATION, SANGIHE ISLAND, INDONESIA 1731

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Boswell Wing and Libby Sharman of the Sulfur Isotope labo- Deditius, A.P., Utsunomiya, S., Ewing, R.C., Chryssoulis, S.L., Venter, D.,
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