Structural Analysis and Exhalite Studies in the Peelwood - Cordillera Area, NSW
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Slater, Raymond M.
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Abstract
Field mapping in the Peelwood-Cordillera area reveals
the complex spatial relationships exhibited by widely variable
lithofacies, which reflect cyclical periods of deposition
associated with an unstable, submarine volcanic environment.
Rapid lateral and vertical facies changes, and the
lack of useful marker horizons preclude the definition of
major structural features, although it is probable that the
area responded to deformation in a similar fashion to
adjoining areas. Widely developed kink folding is interpreted
as the result of a later phase of deformation, and is
developed on all scal.es.
The waning stages of active volcanic cycles are
marked locally by the formation of sub-economic deposits
of stratabound, pyritic base metal mineralization. Massive
sulphides are general.ly enclosed by, and partial.ly laterally
equivalent to, high silica cherty rocks believed also to be
the result of volcanic exhalations.
Geochemical analyses of the cherts show low and
irregular abundances of all elements except silica, and
the correlations they displayed indicate that most elements
were probably supplied to these rocks from a detrital fraction.
Petrographic evidence suggests at least partial
derivation by silicification of pre-existing volcanic or
volcaniclastic rocks, and the occurrence of radiolarian
remains further supports a composite origin for these rocks,
involving volcanic and elastic components in addition to
chemical preci pitation.