Gold has been a major economic asset for Suriname for more than a century. The long history of gold mining, concentrated in large parts of a greenstone belt in the northeast of the country, began with small-scale artisanal extraction activities and has recently seen the development of major open-pit operations. Despite the range of mining activities, Suriname's gold deposits and occurrences are under-explored from a scientific point of view. Primary gold mineralisations in the greenstone belt occur in multiple forms, and although their origin is commonly related to the Palaeoproterozoic Trans-Amazonian orogeny, the controls of ore formation in specific cases often remain obscure. This contribution presents an abridged overview of currently available information on the geological setting and characteristics for some of the main deposits where gold is extracted. In view of the consistent link between gold metallogeny and granitoid-greenstone belts in the northern Guiana Shield, the mineralised settings in Suriname are discussed in a regional context.
CITATION STYLE
Kioe-A-Sen, N. M. E., Van Bergen, M. J., Wong, T. E., & Kroonenberg, S. B. (2016). Gold deposits of Suriname: Geological context, production and economic significance. In Geologie en Mijnbouw/Netherlands Journal of Geosciences (Vol. 95, pp. 429–445). Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/njg.2016.40
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