Geophysical signature of the Hollandaire copper deposit, Western Australia
James Reid, David Price and Edward Summerhayes
ASEG Extended Abstracts
2013(1) 1 - 4
Published: 12 August 2013
Abstract
In 2011 a review of an historical TEMPEST airborne electromagnetic survey in the Murchison Region of Western Australia identified a number of discrete bedrock conductor anomalies potentially associated with base metal mineralisation. One of the anomalies identified was in close proximity to a known gossan at Hollandaire, within rocks of the Archaean Mt Eelya Complex. The Hollandaire gossan had been previously investigated during the mid-late 1970â??s using a variety of geological, geochemical and geophysical methods, including ground magnetics, induced polarisation, magnetic induced polarisation and time-domain electromagnetics. A single line of time-domain in-loop transient electromagnetic data was collected at Hollandaire during 2011, in order to follow up the TEMPEST bedrock conductor. A strong time-domain EM anomaly was identified, with a very high time-constant of 107 ms. Plate modelling of the in-loop data resulted in a target at depth-to-top 100 m, dipping at 45 degrees to the west-northwest, and with conductance 5000 S. The nine initial holes drilled to test the electromagnetic target all intersected sulphide mineralisation. The inferred resource now totals 2.8 million tonnes at 1.6% Cu, 0.4 g/t Au and 5 g/t Ag, with the supergene zone averaging 4.7% Cu. Subsequent downhole electromagnetic (DHEM) surveys have identified an off-hole electromagnetic conductor to the south of the known mineralisation, which has not yet been tested by drilling.https://doi.org/10.1071/ASEG2013ab148
© ASEG 2013