Molybdenite in Pomona Island Granite at Lake Manapouri, Fiordland

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Abstract

A small occurrence of molybdenite (M0S2) mineralisation has been discovered in the weakly A-type Pomona Island Granite on the shorelines of Lake Manapouri in eastern Fiordland. The disseminated appearance of molybdenite and the absence of quartz veins indicates that mineralisation is probably the product of magmatic and/or hydrothermal activity related to pluton crystallisation at c. 157 Ma, and not younger (c. 128-116 Ma) shear zone-related mesothermal mineralisation as has been recently described from the Murchison Mountains to the north and Stewart Island to the south. Although apparently not of economic grade, the Pomona Island Granite locality is regionally important because it is the first direct pluton-related Mo-mineralisation event to be recognised in eastern Fiordland. This occurrence adds to the growing number and known styles of base metal occurrences within the Jurassic-Cretaceous magmatic arc (Outboard Median Batholith) that formed on or near the New Zealand Gondwana margin. Furthermore, the wide distribution of essentially uninvestigated A-type granites in the Outboard Median Batholith means that there may be further Mo-mineralised localities awaiting discovery. © 2011 The Royal Society of New Zealand.

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APA

Scott, J. M., & Palin, J. M. (2011). Molybdenite in Pomona Island Granite at Lake Manapouri, Fiordland. New Zealand Journal of Geology and Geophysics, 54(3), 347–352. https://doi.org/10.1080/00288306.2011.580768

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