Conference Proceedings
1981 AusIMM New Zealand Branch Annual Conference - Mining and the Environment
Conference Proceedings
1981 AusIMM New Zealand Branch Annual Conference - Mining and the Environment
Size Patterns of Gold-Silver Deposits in the Hauraki Goldfield, Coromandel Peninsula
This paper presents an analysis of the production data for the period 1861 - 1953 from hydrothermal gold-silver deposits of the Hauraki Goldfield. To directly compare the metal content of the deposits a figure of ounces of gold equivalents (oz gold equivalent) is calculated from the value of the gold-silver bullion produced from each deposit. Frequency distributions for ore tonnage and oz gold equiv. appear to be lognormal and show a high proportion of very small deposits, with 90 per cent less than 100 000 tonnes. The deposits when plotted in order of size fall roughly on a smooth curve which suggests that the size distribution is not random. A large proportion (68 per cent) of the total gold-silver extracted from the Hauraki district was contained in the largest deposit- Waihi._x000D_
A technique used for predicting undiscovered mineral resources is Zipf's law, which relates the size of an item to its rank order. The figures for ounce gold equivalents from the major Hauraki deposits fit Zipf's law remarkably well._x000D_
Taking Waihi at 6.8 million oz gold equivalent as the rank one deposit, Thames is number five and Karangahake number seven. A Zipf plot indicates that down to rank 100 (68 000 oz gold equivalent) only 28 per cent of the total gold-silver resource in the Hauraki Goldfield has been extracted. A further 72 per cent or 25.4 million oz gold equivalent, including the deposits of rank 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 9 and 10, are undiscovered. However, since some deposits will be deeply buried under younger rocks and others will be under the sea only a proportion of the total resource will be discoverable.
A technique used for predicting undiscovered mineral resources is Zipf's law, which relates the size of an item to its rank order. The figures for ounce gold equivalents from the major Hauraki deposits fit Zipf's law remarkably well._x000D_
Taking Waihi at 6.8 million oz gold equivalent as the rank one deposit, Thames is number five and Karangahake number seven. A Zipf plot indicates that down to rank 100 (68 000 oz gold equivalent) only 28 per cent of the total gold-silver resource in the Hauraki Goldfield has been extracted. A further 72 per cent or 25.4 million oz gold equivalent, including the deposits of rank 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 9 and 10, are undiscovered. However, since some deposits will be deeply buried under younger rocks and others will be under the sea only a proportion of the total resource will be discoverable.
Contributor(s):
R L Brathwaite
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- Published: 1981
- PDF Size: 0.773 Mb.
- Unique ID: P198106004