Where GOLD Comes From!

Gold is relatively scarce in the earth, but
it occurs in many different kinds of rocks
and in many different geological environments.
Though scarce, gold is concentrated by geologic
processes to form commercial deposits of
two principal types: lode (primary) deposits
and placer (secondary) deposits. Lode deposits
are the targets for the "hard rock"
prospector seeking gold at the site of its
deposition from mineralizing solutions. Geologists
have proposed various hypotheses to explain
the source of solutions from which mineral
constituents are precipitated in lode deposits.

One widely accepted hypothesis proposes that
many gold deposits, especially those found
in volcanic and sedimentary rocks, formed
from circulating ground waters driven by
heat from bodies of magma (molten rock) intruded
into the Earth's crust within about 2 to
5 miles of the surface. Active geothermal
systems, which are exploited in parts of
the United States for natural hot water and
steam, provide a modern analog for these
gold-depositing systems. Most of the water
in geothermal systems originates as rainfall,
which moves downward through fractures and
permeable beds in cooler parts of the crust
and is drawn laterally into areas heated
by magma, where it is driven upward through
fractures. As the water is heated, it dissolves
metals from the surrounding rocks. When the
heated waters reach cooler rocks at shallower
depths, metallic minerals precipitate to
form veins or blanket-like ore bodies. Another
hypothesis suggests that gold-bearing solutions
may be expelled from magma as it cools, precipitating
ore materials as they move into cooler surrounding
rocks. This hypothesis is applied particularly
to gold deposits located in or near masses
of granitic rock, which represent solidified
magma. A third hypothesis is applied mainly
to gold-bearing veins in metamorphic rocks
that occur in mountain belts at continental
margins. In the mountain-building process,
sedimentary and volcanic rocks may be deeply
buried or thrust under the edge of the continent,
where they are subjected to high temperatures
and pressures resulting in chemical reactions
that change the rocks to new mineral assemblages
(metamorphism). This hypothesis suggests
that water is expelled from the rocks and
migrates upwards, precipitating ore materials
as pressures and temperatures decrease. The
ore metals are thought to originate from
the rocks undergoing active metamorphism.
The primary concerns of the prospector or
miner interested in a lode deposit of gold
are to determine the average gold content
(tenor) per ton of mineralized rock and the
size of the deposit. From these data, estimates
can be made of the deposit's value. One of
the most commonly used methods for determining
the gold and silver content of mineralized
rocks is the fire assay. The results are
reported as troy ounces of gold or silver
or both per short avoirdupois ton of ore
or as grams per metric ton of ore. Placer
deposits represent concentrations of gold
derived from lode deposits by erosion, disintegration
or decomposition of the enclosing rock, and
subsequent concentration by gravity.
Gold is extremely resistant to weathering
and, when freed from enclosing rocks, is
carried downstream as metallic particles
consisting of "dust," flakes, grains,
or nuggets. Gold particles in stream deposits
are often concentrated on or near bedrock,
because they move downward during high-water
periods when the entire bed load of sand,
gravel, and boulders is agitated and is moving
downstream. Fine gold particles collect in
depressions or in pockets in sand and gravel
bars where the stream current slackens. Concentrations
of gold in gravel are called "pay streaks."
In gold-bearing country, prospectors look
for gold where coarse sands and gravel have
accumulated and where "black sands"
have concentrated and settled with the gold.
Magnetite is the most common mineral in black
sands, but other heavy minerals such as cassiterite,
monazite, ilmenite, chromite, platinum-group
metals, and some gem stones may be present.
Placer deposits have formed in the same manner
throughout the Earth's history. The processes
of weathering and erosion create surface
placer deposits that may be buried under
rock debris. Although these "fossil"
placers are subsequently cemented into hard
rocks, the shape and characteristics of old
river channels are still recognizable.
The content of recoverable free gold in placer
deposits is determined by the free gold assay
method, which
Involves amalgamation of gold-bearing concentrate
collected by dredging, hydraulic mining,
or other placer mining operations. In the
period when the price of gold was fixed,
the common practice was to report assay results
as the value of gold (in cents or dollars)
contained in a cubic yard of material. Now
results are reported as grams per cubic yard
or grams per cubic meter.Through laboratory
research, the U.S. Geological Survey has
developed new methods for determining the
gold content of rocks and soils of the Earth's
crust. These methods, which detect and measure
the amounts of other elements as well as
gold, include atomic absorption spectrometry,
neutron activation, and inductively coupled
plasma-atomic emission spectrometry. These
methods enable rapid and extremely sensitive
analyses to be made on large samples.
In the past two decades, low-grade disseminated
gold deposits have become increasingly important.
More than 75 such deposits have been found
in the Western States, mostly in Nevada.
The first major producer of this type was
the Carlin deposit, which was discovered
in 1962 and started production in 1965. Since
then many more deposits have been discovered
in the vicinity of Carlin, and the Carlin
area now comprises a major mining district
with seven operating open pits producing
more than 1,500,000 troy ounces of gold per
year. About 15 percent of the gold produced
in the United States has come from mining
other metallic ores. Where base metals- -such
as copper, lead, and zinc--are deposited,
either in veins or as scattered mineral grains,
minor amounts of gold are commonly deposited
with them. Deposits of this type are mined
for the predominant metals, but the gold
is also
recovered as a byproduct during processing
of the ore. Most byproduct gold has come
from porphyry deposits, which are so large
that even though they contain only a small
amount of gold per ton of ore, so much rock
is mined that a substantial amount of gold
is recovered. The largest single source of
byproduct gold in the United States is the
porphyry deposit at Bingham Canyon, Utah,
which has produced about 18 million troy
ounces of gold since 1906.
Geologists examine all factors controlling
the origin and emplacement of mineral deposits,
including those containing gold. Igneous
and metamorphic rocks are studied in the
field and in the laboratory to gain an understanding
of how they came to their present location,
how they crystallized to solid rock, and
how mineral-bearing solutions formed within
them.
Studies of rock structures, such as folds,
faults, fractures, and joints, and of the
effects of heat and pressure on rocks suggest
why and where fractures occurred and where
veins might be found. Studies of weathering
processes and transportation of rock debris
by water enable geologists to predict the
most likely places for placer deposits to
form. The occurrence of gold is not capricious;
its presence in various rocks and its occurrence
under differing environmental conditions
follow natural laws. As geologists increase
their knowledge of the mineralizing processes,
they improve their ability to find gold.
e-mail: specimengold@aol.com
