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2005 Society of Economic Geologists, Inc.

Economic Geology 100th Anniversary Volume


pp. 891930

Supplement to

Tectonic Setting, Geology, and Gold and Copper Mineralization in


Cenozoic Magmatic Arcs of Southeast Asia and the West Pacific
STEVE GARWIN, ROBERT HALL, AND YASUSHI WATANABE
(Note: Figure and table numbers correspond to those cited in the printed part of the paper)

APPENDIX 1
Descriptions of the Geologic Settings and Mineral Deposit Styles for
Major Cenozoic Magmatic Arcs of Southeast Asia and the West Pacific

Southwestern Kuril intrusions and domes of the Miocene bimodal assemblage.


The host rocks of these deposits are Cretaceous to Paleogene
Geologic setting: The Miocene to Recent Kuril magmatic sedimentary rocks and Miocene sedimentary and volcanic
arc extends approximately 2,200 km from the northeastern rocks. These deposits occur mainly as gold-bearing quartz-
Kamchatka peninsula to southwestern Hokkaido, where it adularia veins in the east-northeasterly strike-slip faults,
connects to the Aleutian and northeastern Japan arcs, respec- whereas some of them are disseminated in the host rocks
tively (Fig. 11; Table 1). The southwestern portion of the (Watanabe, 1995). The timing of the epithermal gold miner-
Kuril arc is associated with the Kuril backarc basin, which alization ranges from 14 to 4 Ma, with a hiatus from 12 to 8
formed before the middle Miocene, due to northeast-south- Ma, which corresponds to the period of the backarc basin vol-
west rifting (Baranov et al., 2002). The basement rocks of the canism. A few 3 to 1.5 Ma low-sulfidation gold deposits are
southwestern Kuril arc consist of a Mesozoic accretionary also located near the present andesitic volcanic front (Yahata
complex with a cover of Cretaceous and Paleogene sedimen- et al., 1999). Representative deposits in northeast Hokkaido
tary rocks. Eocene to middle Miocene ilmenite-series grani- are Konomai (73.2 t Au, 1,243 t Ag), Sanru (6.7 t Au, 46.4 t
toids intrude the basement rocks (Ishihara et al., 1998). The Ag), and Itomuka (3,086 t Hg).
volcanism of the southwestern Kuril arc has changed from Small volcanic islands in the middle and northeastern parts
middle Miocene andesitic activity to middle to late Miocene of the Kuril arc have not been well explored. The middle and
bimodal basalt and rhyolite, including a period from 12 to 8 northeastern parts contain polymetallic base metal vein-type
Ma with basalt-only volcanism. The andesitic and bimodal prospects of middle and late Miocene age, which are associ-
volcanic activity migrated trenchward during the middle ated with intrusive rocks (Ishihara, 1994).
Miocene (Watanabe, 1995). The middle to late Miocene bi-
modal and basalt-only volcanism occurred mainly in a north- Japan (northeastern and southwestern)
southtrending graben perpendicular to the arc trend Geologic setting: The Japan arc extends approximately
(Watanabe, 1995). The basalts of the Miocene bimodal as- 1,800 km from southwest Hokkaido to north Kyushu, where
semblage changed from island-arc type at 13 to 11 Ma to it connects to the Kuril and Ryukyu arcs, respectively (Fig.
backarc basin basalt at 9 to 7 Ma and again changed into is- 11; Table 1). The arc has a concave configuration toward the
land-arc type at 5 to 4 Ma (Ikeda et al., 2000). Since the Pacific Ocean, consisting of a north-trending northeast seg-
Pliocene, bimodal volcanism in the backarc has disappeared ment and east-trending southwest segment. Presently these
and andesitic volcanic activity at the volcanic front has be- segments are bounded by a major fault zone (Itoigawa-
come dominant. This Plio-Pleistocene activity was associated Shizuoka tectonic line), which also marks the boundary be-
with formation of calderas several to ten kilometers in diam- tween the North American and Eurasian plates (Uyeda,
eter, which erupted large amounts of felsic ignimbrite (Ikeda, 1991). The Izu-Bonin arc is connected with the Japan arc
1991). near the joint between the northeast and southwest segments,
East-northeasterly trending right-lateral strike-slip faults and the Pacific and Philippine Sea plates subduct beneath the
were active during the late middle Miocene nearby the vol- northeast and southwest segments, respectively.
canic front of the southwestern Kuril arc due to oblique sub- The basement rocks of the Japan arc consist of continental
duction of the Pacific plate (Watanabe, 1995). This fault blocks of Permian-Triassic gneiss (the Hida belt, central
movement led to the westward migration and collision of the Japan) and high pressure-temperature schist, and a Jurassic
Kuril forearc sliver with the northeastern Japan arc at south- accretionary complex (Isozaki, 1997a, b). Mesozoic and
ern Hokkaido, forming the present concave joint between the Paleogene I-type granitoids related to oceanic plate subduc-
Kuril and northeastern Japan arcs (Kimura et al., 1983). tion intruded into these basement rocks (Ishihara and Sasaki,
Mineral deposit styles: More than 40 low-sulfidation ep- 1991). The Japan arc was a part of the Eurasian continent
ithermal gold and mercury deposits and prospects are distrib- until latest Oligocene but was separated from the continent
uted in northeast Hokkaido at the southwestern Kuril arc due to backarc spreading mainly along the Japan and Yamato
(Fig. 11, App. 2). They are associated mainly with rhyolitic basins during the early Miocene, with about 60 clockwise

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and counterclockwise rotation of the southwest and northeast Some Kuroko-type gypsum deposits are distributed in the
segments, respectively (Otofuji et al., 1985; Hoshi and Taka- backarc in the southwest segment of the Japan arc (Sato,
hashi, 1999). 1974). An Re-Os age of the Wanibuchi deposit in the south-
Since the early Miocene, arc volcanism has been active in west segment, 18.4 0.6 Ma (Terakado, 2001), is older than
both segments. This volcanism is divided into rift-related ac- the range of ages (15.412.4 Ma; Sawai and Itaya, 1993) for
tivity including bimodal volcanism of basalt and rhyolite in Kuroko mineralization in the northeast segment, suggesting
the backarc during the early-middle Miocene and subduc- that Kuroko-style settings occurred slightly earlier in the
tion-related andesite-dacite activity during the late Miocene, southwest segment than in the northeast segment of the
Pliocene, and Quaternary (Tsuchiya, 1990, Nakajima et al., Japan arc.
1995; Kimura et al., 2003). Rift-related basaltic activity Some middle (or early) Miocene epithermal Au-Ag de-
occurred during the Plio-Pleistocene in northern Kyushu, at posits occur in the northeast segment of the Japan arc and are
the western end of the southwest segment of the Japan arc. related to felsic volcanism (Watanabe, 2002). These include
This rifting is related to the backarc spreading along the Oki- the Sado deposit (72.7 t Au, 2,278 t Ag), which has character-
nawa trough (Kamata and Kodama, 1999). istics of an intermediate-sulfidation type. Because different
The tectonic regime of the northeast segment of the arc sets of mineralization ages, 24.4 to 22.1 Ma (Ministry of In-
since the Miocene has changed from early to middle Miocene ternational Trade and Industry, 1987a) and 14.5 to 13.4 Ma
extension, characterized by arc-parallel normal faulting with (Shikazono and Tsunakawa, 1982), are reported for the de-
rifted basins, to late Pliocene to Quaternary shortening with posit, the relationship between the Kuroko and epithermal
arc-parallel thrusting and folding, through a late Miocene to mineralization is not clear.
early Pliocene transitional regime without significant tectonic Late Miocene to Pleistocene Cu-Pb-Zn-Ag epithermal and
deformation (Sato, 1994). The middle Miocene rifting and re- Au-Ag epithermal deposits are mainly distributed in the
lated bimodal volcanism is best developed in the middle part northeast segments of the Japan arc, associated with calc-al-
of the northeast segment. Bimodal volcanism is not clear or kaline andesite-dacite volcanism in a terrestrial environment.
mixed with andesite-dacite volcanism in the northern and These deposits are mostly of vein type and hosted by
southern margins of the northeast segment, where the Okhotsk transtensional faults. Although there are numerous mineral
continental block and the Izu-Bonin arc have collided with prospects of late Miocene age, economic deposits were
the Japan arc during the middle Miocene, respectively (Kimura mainly formed during the Pliocene or Pleistocene in an arc
et al., 1983; Amano, 1991. East-northeasterly trending right- setting (Watanabe, 2002). Epithermal deposits during this pe-
lateral strike-slip faulting occurred during the Pliocene in the riod are classified into intermediate- or high-sulfidation types,
northern part of the northeast segment due to the westward but the high-sulfidation deposits are small (Watanabe, 2002).
migration of the frontal Kuril arc (Watanabe, 1990). Representative deposits are the Chitose intermediate-sulfida-
Significant faulting and folding have not been recognized in tion (18 t Au, 83 t Ag), Teine high- and intermediate-sulfida-
the southwest segment of the Japan arc during the Miocene tion (9 t Au, 130 t Ag), Toyoha polymetallic epithermal (1.8
and Pliocene. Since the latest Pliocene, east-trending right- Mt Zn, 0.5 Mt Pb, 3,000 t Ag, 10 t Au), Takatama intermedi-
lateral strike-slip faulting has occurred along the Median tec- ate-sulfidation (28.7 t Au, 280 t Ag), and Ashio xenothermal
tonic line and other tectonic zones, as well as thrusting along (0.6 Mt Cu) deposits.
the north-northwesttrending Itoigawa-Shizuoka tectonic An epithermal gold province occurs in northern Kyushu,
ine. These tectonic movements are ascribed to the oblique where backarc rifting along the Okinawa trough has extended
subduction of the Philippine Sea plate beneath the southwest into the arc. The province contains about 20 low-sulfidation
segment of the Japan arc (Itoh et al., 2002) and convergence deposits of Plio-Pleistocene age, associated with intermediate
between the North American and Eurasian plates (Uyeda, to felsic volcanism in and around the Beppu-Shimabara
1991), respectively. graben (Sawai and Nagao, 2003). These include the Taio de-
Mineral deposit styles: Metallic mineral deposits of the Japan posit (36.0 t Au, 137 t Ag).
arc include middle Miocene Cu-Pb-Zn (-Ag-Au) Kuroko de-
posits and late Miocene to Pleistocene Cu-Pb-Zn and Au-Ag Izu-Bonin
epithermal deposits (Fig 10; Watanabe, 2002). About 70 Geologic setting: The north-trending Izu-Bonin arc extends
Kuroko deposits, including massive gypsum and barite de- approximately 1,200 km from the Izu peninsula of Honshu Is-
posits, have been discovered in the 800-km-long northeast seg- land to the Iwo-jima Islands at 25 N and 142 E in the Pacific
ment of the Japan arc (Sato, 1974). These deposits are associ- Ocean (Fig. 11; Table 1). This magmatic arc is situated along the
ated with monogenetic rhyolite volcanism of the middle eastern margin of the Philippine Sea plate due to northwest-
Miocene backarc bimodal assemblage in a submarine environ- ward subduction of the Pacific plate. It connects to the Japan
ment. In spite of the wide distribution of the Kuroko deposits arc in the north and the Mariana arc in the south. Rift grabens
in the northeast segment, economic deposits are limited to the exist in the backarc of the central portion of the Izu-Bonin, and
middle part of the segment. In particular, productive Kuroko the Ogasawara plateau on the Pacific plate is being subducted
deposits cluster in submarine calderas in the Hokuroku district. beneath the southern margin of the arc (Tamaki, 1985).
Representative deposits in the Hokuroku district are Hanaoka This arc was located farther southwest relative to Japan
(0.96 Mt Cu, 1.3 Mt Zn, 0.3 Mt Pb), Shakanai (0.1 Mt Cu, 0.3 when Cenozoic arc magmatism commenced in the middle
Mt Zn, 0.1 Mt Pb), Kosaka (0.6 Mt Cu, 1.7 Mt Zn, 0.4 Mt Pb; Eocene, and then the arc moved northeast in response to
Ohmoto et al., 1983), and the gold-rich Nurukawa deposit (6.8 clockwise rotation and backarc spreading of the Philippine
t Au, 123 t Ag + Zn + Pb + Cu). Sea plate (Seno and Maruyama, 1984; Hall et al., 1995). The

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arc probably reached its present position by the middle (Figs. 2, 10; Table 1). The arc consists of the Ryukyu trench,
Miocene and has collided and accreted to the Japan arc at its forearc islands, an active volcanic belt, and the Okinawa
northern end in the Izu peninsula (Amano, 1991; Takahashi trough in the backarc. The Ryukyu arc is related to westward
and Saito, 1997). However, some workers (e.g., Hall, 2002) subduction of the Philippine Sea plate beneath the Eurasian
suggest this collision took place as late as the Pliocene. This plate at a velocity of 6 to 7 cm/yr (Shinjo, 1999).
accretion is inferred to have increased the coupling force be- The basement rocks consist of Permian to Cretaceous
tween the arc and subducting Pacific plate (Okino et al., sedimentary or serpentinite mlange, including blocks of
1999). Two stages of arc rifting are recognized, including mid- limestone and metamorphic rocks, and Cretaceous to Paleo-
dle Miocene and latest Pliocene to Quaternary. The middle gene sedimentary rocks. These basement rocks are overlain
Miocene rifting occurred in the northern part of the backarc by late Cenozoic sedimentary rocks. Middle to late Miocene
with north-northwesttrending rift axes, which were trun- ilmenite-series and magnetite-series granitoids intruded the
cated by northeast transform faults (Yamazaki and Yuasa, forearc and backarc sides of the northern part of the arc, re-
1998). The latest Pliocene to Quaternary rifting is manifested spectively. This intrusive activity was followed by Pliocene
in the central part of the arc by several grabens with north- and Quaternary calc-alkaline andesite volcanism, which is as-
trending axes located behind the volcanic front (Taylor, 1992). sociated with rhyolite and dacite in the backarc (Karakida et
The oldest island-arc rocks in the Izu-Bonin arc are middle al., 1992). Paleomagnetic data (Kodama et al., 1995) and lo-
Eocene (4948 Ma) island-arc tholeiite and boninite series cations determined from Global Positioning System (GPS)
basalt to rhyolite. This volcanism continued for more than 10 data (Nishimura et al., 1999) for the northern part of the arc
m.y. and was followed by tholeiitic and calc-alkaline volcanism, indicate that the forearc has rotated counterclockwise with
which occurred along the arc until 27 Ma. Arc volcanism be- respect to the backarc part since 2 Ma, resulting in east-
came inactive during 23 to 20 Ma, when backarc spreading in trending extension along the Kagoshima graben in south
the Shikoku basin was active. Middle Miocene to Holocene Kyushu. In the central and southern part of the arc, middle
Izu-Bonin frontal arc volcanism is bimodal (basalt and rhyolite- and late Miocene high Mg andesite and basalt occur with
dacite; Taylor, 1992), whereas calc-alkaline andesite and dacite calc-alkaline andesite (Shinjo, 1999). Since the latest
characterized the backarc from 12.5 to 2.9 Ma (Ishizuka et al., Pliocene, backarc spreading began in the Okinawa trough
1998). Post-2.8 Ma backarc volcanism consists of clinopyrox- (Sibuet et al., 1998), which is characterized by bimodal vol-
ene-olivine basalt associated with rifting (Ishizuka et al., 1998). canism of basalt and rhyolite (Shinjo and Kato, 2000), sea-
The tectonic regime of the Izu-Bonin arc has been exten- floor hydrothermal activity and Kuroko-style mineralization
sional, characterized by several stages of normal faulting at (Marumo and Hattori, 1999).
least since the Oligocene, except along its northern margin, Near Taiwan, the arc is characterized by Eocene pyroclas-
where the arc has collided with the Japan arc. Accretion of tic rocks and andesite flows, Miocene marine siliciclastic
several microcontinental blocks since the middle Miocene rocks and an active submarine volcano (Hutchison, 1989).
has rotated the central part of the Japan arc. This accretion Northern Taiwan lies at the junction between the Ryukyu and
also formed an accretionary prism and thrusts in the Japan Luzon arcs, where these two arcs started colliding at 10 Ma
forearc (Mazzotti et al., 2002). The Izu block, accreted to the (Teng, 1996). In this region, Plio-Pleistocene centers of mag-
Japan arc at about 1 Ma (Amano, 1991), contains northwest- matism (2.80.2 Ma; Chung et al., 1995) have migrated west-
trending right-lateral and north-northeasttrending left-lat- ward, in part, initiated by the westerly encroachment of the
eral strike-slip faults that localize epithermal gold deposits. Ryukyu trench and the southwestward opening of the Oki-
Mineral deposit styles: Metallic mineral deposits along the nawa trough (Teng et al., 1992). Backarc extension in the
Izu-Bonin arc include Kuroko and epithermal deposits (Fig. Pleistocene led to the emplacement of andesitic to dacitic hy-
11). Kuroko-style submarine hydrothermal mineralization is pabyssal plugs and flows, dated in the Chinkuashih region at
presently recognized at Myojin Knoll, Myojinsho, and in the 1.3 to 0.9 Ma (Tan, 1991; Wang et al., 1999). The volcanic
Sumisu rift of the Izu-Bonin arc (Glasby, 2000). The gold-rich rocks overlie a Miocene marine sedimentary rock sequence,
Cu-Zn-Pb Sunrise deposit at Myojin Knoll is estimated to have similar to that exposed in the Ryukyu arc to the northeast.
9 million tons (Mt) of mineralized material (Iizasa et al., 1999). Mineral deposit styles: The southern Kyushu epithermal
Epithermal Au-Ag deposits are located in the Izu peninsula gold province in the northern Ryukyu arc contains Plio-Pleis-
at the northern end of the Izu-Bonin arc. These include tocene low-sulfidation deposits, represented by Hishikari
Seigoshi (16.0 Au, 511 Ag), Toi (12.1 t Au; 94 t Ag), Mochikoshi (260 t Au, 208 t Ag), Yamagano, (28.4 t Au, 28.3 t Ag), and
(4.9 t Au, 104 t Ag), and others. These deposits consist of Okuchi (22.2 t Au, 17.0 t Ag) with a few high-sulfidation de-
northwest- or north-northeasttrending, gold-bearing adu- posits, such as Akeshi (8.9 t Au, 4.7 t Ag), Kasuga (8.8 t Au,
laria-quartz veins oriented subparallel to regional strike-slip 5.0 t Ag), and Iwato (8.1 t Au, 13.7 t Ag), and the Kushikino
faults. These veins have characteristics of an intermediate- or intermediate-sulfidation deposit (55.9 t Au, 477 t Ag; Fig. 11;
low-sulfidation type. Mineralization ages vary from 2.5 to 1.4 Izawa and Watanabe, 2001). These deposits cluster on the
Ma, which corresponds to a period of bimodal volcanism of western side of the Kagoshima graben (Izawa and Urashima,
basalt and rhyolite-dacite, as well as andesitic volcanism 1987). Epithermal gold mineralization in the province started
(Ministry of International Trade and Industry, 1987b). with Pliocene high- and intermediate-sulfidation deposits in
the west of the province (Kushikino, 3.73.4 Ma; Kasuga.
Ryukyu 5.55.3 Ma; Iwato, 4.74.2 Ma, and Akeshi, 3.7 Ma) and has
Geologic setting: The Ryukyu arc extends approximately extended eastward with time to form Pleistocene low-sulfida-
1,200 km from southern Kyushu Island in Japan to Taiwan tion deposits (Okuchi, 1.61.2 Ma; Hishikari, 1.10.7 Ma;

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Sudo et al., 2003). This eastward expansion of the metallo- The Neogene component of the arc includes andesitic flows,
genic province followed an eastward shift of the Ryukyu vol- tuffs, and volcaniclastic rocks. The Mount Pinatubo stratovol-
canic front and is probably related to the counterclockwise ro- cano forms part of the Quaternary portion of the western
tation of Kyushu Island (Izawa and Watanabe, 2001). The Luzon arc.
Kushikino intermediate-sulfidation deposit is associated with Older portions of the arc occur in the Luzon Central
an andesitic polygenetic volcano (Izawa and Zeng, 2001), Cordillera and include Eocene (?) to Miocene basaltic to an-
whereas low-sulfidation deposits are associated with rhyolitic desitic volcanic breccias, volcaniclastic rocks, limestones,
or dacitic monogenetic volcanic activity in the backarc shales, and conglomerates (United Nations Development
(Miyashita, 1975). Magmatic activity related to the high-sulfi- Program, 1987a; Metal Mining Agency of Japan, 1979). In the
dation deposits has not been clarified, although these deposits Central Cordillera, several phases of diorite to tonalite intru-
are hosted by late Miocene to early Pliocene andesitic vol- sions and their hypabyssal equivalents were emplaced from
canic rocks (Hedenquist et al., 1994). The low-sulfidation de- the early Miocene through the Pliocene (Metal Mining
posits in the metallogenic province are composed mostly of Agency of Japan, 1979, 1983; United Nations Development
adularia-quartz veins with alteration halos of sericite-chlorite Program, 1987a; Garcia, 1991). The Kias Creek dike complex
at depth and quartz-smectite kaolinite near the surface in in Baguio (Mitchell and Leach, 1991) includes pyroxene-
widespread chlorite or smectite-zeolite alteration zones hornblende-phyric diabases, lamprophyres, and appinites
(Izawa and Urashima, 1987). High-sulfidation deposits are that contain amphibolite xenoliths of inferred arc basement
characterized by replacement ores hosted by residual quartz origin (Paddy Waters, writ. commun., 2004). Three of these
and quartz-alunite-dickite (or kaolinite) alteration zones dikes indicate Ar-Ar ages that range from 4.6 to 4.0 Ma
(Hedenquist et al., 1994). (Paddy Waters, writ. commun., 2004). Mineralized diatreme
The Chinkuashih high-sulfidation Au-Cu district in north- breccias are associated with the emplacement of the Balatoc
eastern Taiwan has produced more than 92 t Au (Fig. 2, App. plug in the Baguio district. This magmatism is dated at 1.0 Ma
2; Tan, 1991). Orebodies consist of enargite-gold vein sys- (Metal Mining Agency of Japan, 1983; Cooke et al., 1996).
tems, hydrothermal breccia pipes, and replacement bodies, The pre- and postmineralization Plio-Pleistocene quartz dior-
which are spatially and temporally associated with Pleistocene ite and dacite intrusions and diatreme-related pyroclastic
dacitic hypabyssal intrusions. Host rocks include the dacitic rocks in the Mankayan district span the periods 2.2 to 1.8 and
intrusions and Miocene calcareous and carbonaceous sand- 1.2 to 0.9 Ma, respectively (Arribas et al., 1995; Hedenquist
stones and shales. Bonanza grades have been reported from et al, 1998). Plio-Pleistocene ages are reported for mineral-
many of these orebodies, but in more recent years mine ized diorite intrusions at Sto. Thomas II (Sillitoe, 1989;
grades averaged approximately 3 g/t Au. The majority of the Baluda and Galapan, 1993) and Black Mountain (Waters,
past production was from the 2-km-long Penshan-Hsumei 2004) near Baguio, and at Tawi-Tawi (Wolfe, 1981) in the
vein system in the central portion of the district. The Chi- southeastern portion of the Central Cordillera.
ufen-Wutanshan intermediate-sulfidation vein system occurs Mineral deposit styles: Porphyry copper-gold deposits and
about 1 km west of the high-sulfidation deposits and pro- related high- and intermediate-sulfidation epithermal sys-
duced 29 t Au (Tan, 1991). The Tatun district, located 30 km tems are abundant in the Luzon Central Cordillera and west-
west of Chinkuashih, is characterized by one high-sulfidation ern Luzon arcs (Fig. 13, App. 3). These deposits are predom-
system, which was prospected for gold and copper in the past inantly centered about Neogene to Pleistocene quartz
(Yen, 1971). diorite-diorite intrusions hosted by coeval volcanic suites. The
Central Cordillera hosts the intermediate-sulfidation gold
Luzon lode systems of Acupan, Antamok, and Itogon, and the Sto.
Geologic setting: The Luzon arc, as defined in this paper, Thomas II porphyry in the Baguio district, where an esti-
represents a composite arc system that extends 1,200 km mated 800 t Au have been produced (Mitchell and Balce,
southward from the Coastal Range of southeastern Taiwan 1990). In Acupan, several major gold-bearing quartz vein sys-
through the volcanic islands north of Luzon, the Luzon Cen- tems, 0.65 Ma in age (Cooke et al., 1996), occur adjacent to
tral Cordillera, and the Western Luzon arc, terminating in the and within the Pleistocene Balatoc diatreme and comprise
vicinity of southern Marinduque Island (Fig. 12; Table 1; sheeted veins, stockworks, and the high-grade GW breccia
Cardwell et al, 1980; Bureau of Mines and Geo-Sciences, bodies (Cooke and Bloom, 1990). The Itogon intermediate-
1982; Mitchell and Leach, 1991). The arc has been active sulfidation gold-bearing quartz vein deposit occurs along the
from the Oligocene to the present and is presently underlain eastern periphery of the Balatoc diatreme and is the eastward
by an east-dipping Benioff zone related to the Manila trench extension of the Acupan system. The total length of the com-
(Divis, 1980). The subduction of the Scarborough Seamounts bined deposits approximates 4 km. In Antamok, major quartz
beneath northern Luzon during the Plio-Pleistocene proba- vein systems and associated stockworks are hosted by an-
bly led to extinction of volcanism in the Central Cordillera desitic agglomerate and intercalated lava flows. Emplace-
and the volcanic islands north of Luzon from ~4 to 2 Ma and ment of the Antamok and Acupan-Itogon vein systems was
eastward migration of magmatism from ~2 Ma to the controlled by tensional fractures developed along regional
Holocene (Fig. 7; Yang et al., 1996). east-northeast and northwest-trending conjugate strike-slip
Cretaceous ophiolitic basement is exposed in the Zambales faults (Fernandez and Damasco, 1979). The average global
region of the western Luzon arc. The United Nations (United grades of these three deposits are inferred to range from 4 to
Nations Development Program, 1987b) infers a similar se- 6 g/t Au, which includes past production from high-grade
quence to form the foundation for the Central Cordillera. (>10 g/t Au) lodes.

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The Lepanto high-sulfidation enargite-gold deposit, the Mineral deposit styles: This K alkaline province includes
Victoria and Teresa intermediate-sulfidation vein systems, the Didipio district on the southeastern margin of the Palali
and the Far South East and Guinaoang porphyry deposits intrusion and the Isabella district within the Cordon syenite
occur in the nearby Mankayan district, which contains a min- complex (Fig. 13). Significant resources occur in the Dinkidi
imum of 700 t Au in combined past production and current copper-gold porphyry deposit (120 t Au, 0.5 Mt Cu) in Didi-
resources. There is a clear genetic association between por- pio and the Marian intermediate-sulfidation epithermal gold
phyry and epithermal styles of mineralization in Mankayan. mine and nearby porphyry copper-gold system in Isabella.
The Far South East porphyry formed below and coeval to Dinkidi is hosted by a composite monzonite stock that has
Lepanto at 1.4 to 1.3 Ma, both deposits associated with the been intruded by a highly mineralized syenite pegmatite dike,
emplacement of quartz diorite porphyry; the Victoria vein which forms a gold-rich (515 g/t Au) core (Wolfe et al.,
system formed at ~1.15 Ma, as the hydrothermal system 1999). The spatial extent of quartz stockwork veins and flank-
waned (Hedenquist et al, 1998, 2001). At Lepanto, residual ing feldspar-destructive sericitic and argillic alteration zones
quartz alteration of dacitic wall rocks host east-trending enar- for the deposit is more restricted than recorded in the calc-al-
gite-gold branch veins and stratiform lodes localized around kaline porphyry systems elsewhere in Luzon. The Runruno
the intersection of the steeply dipping northwest-striking intermediate-sulfidation gold deposit and the Pao high-sulfi-
Lepanto fault and the gently dipping unconformable base of dation enargite-gold occurrence (Kavalieris and Gonzalez,
a Pliocene dacitic pyroclastic sequence. The dacitic rocks 1990) are also located in the Cordon arc.
form part of the Mankayan diatreme-dome complex (Garcia,
1991; Baker, 1992). The Victoria gold-base metal-quartz vein Philippine
system is located <1 km southwest of Far South East, at a Geologic setting: The Philippine arc (Cardwell et al., 1980)
similar level to Lepanto. The veins average 7.3 g/t Au and or the Pacific Cordillera extends more than 1,000 km from
form an east-trending tensional array localized by right-lateral Camarines in southern Luzon to the Pujada peninsula in
movement on mine-scale strike-slip faults (Claveria et al., southeastern Mindanao (Fig. 12; Table 1). The arc occurs
1999). The Teresa intermediate-sulfidation gold deposit, dis- close to the sinistral Philippine fault. Geologic basement to
covered in 2002, lies to the southwest of Victoria and extends the arc consists of Cretaceous ultramafic rocks and Paleogene
south to the Nayak vein system. It contains an estimated re- andesitic volcanic, volcaniclastic, marine siliciclastic, and car-
source of 7.3 Mt at ~5.3 g/t Au (Waters, 2004). Both the bonate rocks (Bureau of Mines and Geo-Sciences, 1982).
Mankayan and Baguio districts occur in zones of structural The arc includes segments that have been active at differ-
complexity near major north-northwesttrending fault splays ent times between the Oligocene and Quaternary (Divis,
of the sinistral strike-slip Philippine fault (Fig. 13). 1980; United Nations Development Program, 1987b).
The gold-rich Dizon copper porphyry deposit in the Zam- Oligocene-Miocene basaltic breccias and turbidites are over-
bales region and the Tayson copper-gold porphyry deposit in lain by Neogene andesitic to dacitic volcaniclastic rocks, lavas,
the Batangas area occur in the western Luzon arc. Both por- and calcareous siliciclastic rock units in northeastern Min-
phyry deposits are located in Miocene to Pliocene windows in danao (United Nations Development Program, 1987b). A fo-
Quaternary volcanic cover. liated to massive trondjhemite dome (Paracale granodiorite of
The Chimei copper-gold porphyry system in the Coastal Frost, 1959), Miocene diorite and andesite porphyry, and
Range in eastern Taiwan is inferred to lie in the northern ex- Pliocene dacite porphyry occur in Camarines (United Nations
tension of the Luzon arc. Early Miocene ages (22 and 19 Ma) Development Program, 1987c). The diorite and andesite por-
are indicated for andesite from the Chimei porphyry deposit phyry intrusions in the Leyte, Surigao, Co-O, and Masara
(Chen, 1975, in Hutchison, 1989). areas of east Mindanao are Miocene in age (Mitchell and
Leach, 1991). Miocene andesitic volcanic rocks, volcaniclastic
Cordon rocks, and intrusions also characterize the Leyte sector of the
Geologic setting: Surface exposures of alkaline igneous arc. In eastern Mindanao, late Pliocene to Quaternary an-
rocks in north-central Luzon define two discrete regions, the desitic volcanoes, associated eruptive products and por-
Cordon syenite complex and the Palali intrusion, which lie at phyritic stocks occur near Surigao and Lake Leonard in the
the southern end of the Cagayan rift basin. The basement to Masara region (Mitchell and Leach, 1991; Sajona et al.,
the Cagayan basin consists of Cretaceous to Paleogene calc- 1997). Pleistocene to Recent (active) volcanoes characterize
alkaline plutonic, volcanic, and volcaniclastic rocks (Table 1). arc portions in Camarines, southeastern Luzon, and Leyte
K alkaline magmatism occurred in the late Oligocene and (Divis, 1980).
early Miocene, as indicated by K-Ar ages of ~25 Ma for the The Philippine arc presently lies above a west-dipping
Cordon Syenite Complex (Knittel, 1983) and 25 to 17 Ma for Benioff zone related to the Philippine trench. However,
the Palali intrusion (Metal Mining Agency of Japan, 1977). pre-Pliocene arc magmatism is not related to subduction at
The emplacement of these intrusive complexes may be re- this trench, as the trench is a young feature (Hamilton,
lated to intraplate magmatism initiated by subduction be- 1979) and the subducting slab only reaches depths of 150 to
neath Luzon, as expressed by Divis (1983) and Knittel and 250 km (Gudmundsson and Sambridge, 1998). The source
Cundari (1990), but there is no agreement as to the polarity. of this pre-Pliocene magmatism is probably related to east-
Other possible sources of the alkaline magmatism include de- directed subduction on the west side of the Philippines.
layed partial melting of a relict subduction slab, as postulated However, the subduction history in the Philippines is com-
for southeastern Papua New Guinea by Johnson et al. (1978) plex and most likely involved the formation of small intra-
and Smith and Milsom (1984) or intra-arc extension. Philippines ocean basins within an overall strike-slip zone.

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The present Philippine fault is mechanically linked to Masbate-Negros


Pliocene to Recent subduction along the Philippine trench, Geologic setting: This arc assemblage consists of two over-
but the Philippine fault predates this subduction, which im- lapping arcs of different ages. The combined arc system ex-
plies a complex plate boundary during the Neogene. The ge- tends 400 km and includes eastern Panay (Fig. 12; Table 1).
ology of the islands indicates a long history of strike-slip The arc system is terminated against the Philippine fault in
faulting (Rutland, 1968; Karig et al., 1986). the north and abuts the Sulu-Zamboanga arc to the south.
Mineral deposit styles: The gold districts of Paracale, Sta Cretaceous basement includes marine sedimentary rocks and
Elena-Tabas, and Nalesbitan in the Camarines Norte, and pillow basalts, exposed in southeast Negros (Hamilton, 1979)
Surigao, Masara, and the Diwalwal-Compestela areas in east- and serpentinized ultramafic rocks in northeastern Masbate
ern Mindanao are characteristic of the gold districts in the (Mitchell and Leach, 1991).
Philippine arc (Fig. 13). Several historic intermediate-sulfida- In the older western arc, Eocene to Oligocene andesitic to
tion lodes in the Paracale area (e.g., Longos mine) occur dacitic volcanic and clastic rocks host a Miocene dacitic dia-
along the contact between the Paracale trondjhemite and ser- treme complex at Bulawan in southwest Negros and middle
pentinized ultramafics (Frost, 1959). Gold in the Paracale and Miocene dioritic intrusions in northeast Masbate (Mitchell
Sta Elena-Tabas areas are associated with intermediate-sulfi- and Leach, 1991). In the younger eastern arc, middle
dation lodes (United Nations Development Program, 1987c), Miocene to Pliocene andesite flow breccias, volcaniclastic
which contain tellurides at Exciban (James and Fuchs, 1990), rocks and conglomerates are overlain by late Pliocene an-
and the Larap (Mantanlang) porphyry Cu-Mo-Au deposit desitic volcanic rocks and Quaternary andesite to basalt stra-
(Sillitoe and Gappe, 1984). Nalesbitan is a small high-sulfida- tovolcanoes (Bureau of Mines and Geo-Sciences, 1982;
tion gold deposit hosted by andesitic volcanic rocks (Sillitoe et United Nations Development Program, 1987d).
al., 1990). In central Samar, Kuroko-type massive sulfide de- The two arcs are the product of subduction beneath Negros
posits at the Bagacay mine and Sulat deposit contain signifi- but the polarity of the older arc is not clear; it has been inter-
cant gold in addition to copper and silver (Bureau of Mines preted to be situated above a west- (Sajona et al., 1997) or
and Geo-Sciences, 1986). east-dipping (Holloway, 1982; Hall, 2002) subduction zone.
Gold deposits and prospects in eastern Mindanao consist The younger arc is probably the product of east-dipping sub-
of intermediate-sulfidation lode and stockwork styles duction at the Negros trench, which currently appears to be
(Placer, Co-O, Diwalwal-Compestela, and Masara), dissem- inactive or almost so (Cardwell et al., 1980) and associated
inated sedimentary rock-hosted and replacement styles with a slab that extends to a depth of about 100 km (Gud-
(Siana and Hijo), and porphyry Cu-Au deposits (Boyongan, mundsson and Sambridge, 1998).
Kingking, Amacan, and Mapula). Descriptions of the major- Mineral deposit styles: The western Masbate-Negros arc
ity of these deposits are included in Mitchell and Leach contains the Masbate intermediate-sulfidation stockwork gold
(1991), with the exception of Boyongan and Bayugo, which mine (62 t Au, Aroroy district) in northeastern Masbate, and
were recently discovered near Surigao. The Boyungan de- the Bulawan intermediate-sulfidation gold deposit and gold-
posit is hosted by a K silicate altered, calc-alkaline diorite- poor Sipalay and Hinobaan porphyry Cu Mo deposits in
porphyry composite stock emplaced within a sequence of southwest Negros (Fig. 13; Sillitoe and Gappe, 1984). Approx-
Neogene(?) andesite, pyroclastic rocks, and basaltic flows imately 40 t Au were exploited from underground lode mines
(Josef, 2002). The deposit is concealed beneath a more than in the Aroroy district prior to World War II (Mitchell and
50-m-thick, postmineralization cover sequence of Quater- Leach, 1991). Open-pit reserves established in 1980 averaged
nary andesitic flows, laharic breccia, tuff, mudstone, and 2.3g/t Au. Gold mineralization is associated with Miocene an-
conglomerate. The Boyungan and Bayugo porphyry systems desite to dacite clastic rocks at Masbate and a similar-aged
formed at ~2.6 to 2.3 Ma, approximately coeval to the de- dacitic diatreme complex at Bulawan (Mitchell and Leach,
velopment of the Siana sedimentary rock-hosted deposit 1991; Philex, 1995). In contrast, the gold-poor porphyry sys-
(Waters, 2004). Boyongan is inferred to have been uplifted tems are considered to be Eocene to Oligocene in age (Bureau
during the late Pliocene-Pleistocene and to have formed a of Mines and Geo-Sciences, 1986; Singer et al., 2002).
prominent topographic high, on the basis of an unusually The eastern Masbate-Negros arc includes geothermal areas
deep supergene oxidation profile that extends 300 to 500 m and several andesite-hosted silica bodies, which are inferred
beneath the base of the Quaternary cover rock sequence to represent the upper levels of high-sulfidation epithermal
(Josef, 2002; Waters, 2004). This relationship indicates that systems (United Nations Development Program, 1987d).
shortly after Boyongan formed, it was uplifted by at least 1 There may be potential for concealed porphyry-style miner-
km in the Plio-Pleistocene to partly expose the K silicate-al- alization at depth. Pliocene(?) conglomerates with pyritic-
tered core of the system and then downdropped as much as quartz and acid-sulfatealtered clasts indicate a minimum age
500 m in a pull-apart basin, developed by movement along for the high-sulfidation systems in southeast Negros (Mitchell
strands of the sinistral Philippine fault system, prior to Qua- and Balce, 1990).
ternary volcanism, which concealed and preserved the de-
posit. In northeastern Mindanao, the westward-younging
and progressive compositional changes of intrusive centers Sulu-Zamboanga
from ~4.5 Ma to Recent (Sajona et al., 1997), and the for- Geologic setting: This arc extends approximately 400 km
mations of porphyry deposits at ~2.5 Ma, could be related to westward from the Semporna peninsula in eastern Sabah
west-directed subduction, if initated at 6 to 5.5 Ma (Paddy through the Sulu archipelago to the Zamboanga peninsula,
Waters, writ. commun., 2004). where it is truncated by the western Cotobato and the

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Masbate-Negros arc systems (Fig. 12; Table 1). The Zam- massive sulfide deposits (e.g., Canatuan and Malusok). Host
boanga peninsula can be subdivided into two segments by the rocks include intermediate volcanic and volcaniclastic rocks
Sindangan-Cotobato-Daguma lineament (Cotabato fault and coeval intrusions for the porphyry and epithermal styles
zone of Pubellier et al., 1991, and Rohrlach et al., 1999), of deposits and siliciclastic sedimentary rocks and schists for
which has been interpreted as the accretionary boundary be- the massive sulfide deposits. The Sibutad epithermal vein sys-
tween the Cotabato island arc to the northeast and a conti- tem is the largest gold resource discovered to date (23 t Au)
nental fragment to the southwest (Jimenez et al., 2002). The and contains hydrothermal breccia bodies, silica sinter de-
juxtaposition of these two terranes commenced in the middle posits, and alteration types indicative of shallow- to near-sur-
Miocene, with collision still active today, according to Rangin face development during the Pleistocene (Jimenez et al.,
et al. (1999). The source of the interpreted continental frag- 2002).
ment is not clear nor is its existence documented conclusively. In the Semporna peninsula, a high-sulfidation system at
Pre-Tertiary granitoids and metasedimentary rocks form the Nagos and intermediate-sulfidation quartz-gold lodes at Bt.
basement in the southwestern part, and Cretaceous serpen- Mantri are hosted by andesite to dacite volcanic and volcani-
tinized ultramafic rocks and metasedimentary rocks comprise clastic rocks and hypabyssal plugs of inferred Pliocene age
the basement in the northeastern part, of the Zamboanga (Kirk, 1968; Yan, 1990). Mineralization styles in both Nagos
peninsula (Hamilton, 1979; Jimenez et al., 2002). and Bt. Mantri are interpreted by Yan (1990) to have devel-
The Sulu and Zamboanga sectors of the arc are composed oped in the upper levels of epithermal systems.
generally of Neogene to Quaternary andesitic volcanics and
sedimentary rocks. Plio-Pleistocene subaerially erupted an- Cotabato-Central Mindanao
desitic volcanic rocks and hypabyssal intrusions occur in the Geologic setting: This section describes two arcs, the Cota-
northeastern part of Zamboanga, with Miocene marine silici- bato arc to the southwest and the Central Mindanao arc to the
clastic and carbonate rocks covering much of southwestern northeast (Fig. 12; Table 1). In southern Mindanao, the
Zamboanga; the suture between the two terranes is marked boundary between these two arcs is marked by the Cotabato
by a Neogene mlange complex (Jimenez et al., 2002). In the fault zone. The Cotabato arc includes the Daguma and
Semporna and Dent peninsulas of Sabah there are Neogene Sarangani regions and is inferred to be the northern extension
calc-alkaline and K-rich calc-alkaline basalts, andesites, and of the Sangihe arc. The Cotabato fault zone has been inter-
dacites above a Cretaceous to Paleogene basement of chert, preted as the onshore extension of the Molucca Sea collision
basalts and ultramafic rocks (Kirk, 1968; Hutchison, 1989; zone (Pubellier et al., 1991), but there is no evidence in Min-
Yan, 1990; Chiang, 2002). Arc activity terminated in the late danao for the northward continuation of the Halmahera arc,
Pliocene and intraplate basalts were erupted in the Pleis- and the Molucca Sea collision zone may terminate at the Cota-
tocene at a number of small centers. Chiang (2002) suggests bato fault, which acted as a strike-slip fault during the Neo-
that geochemical variation in the Mio-Pliocene volcanic rocks gene (Hall, 1996, 2002). Toward the northwest, this fault zone
indicates northwest-directed subduction. The change to in- is obscured by a sequence of Quaternary flood basalts, basalt
traplate basic magmatism during the Pleistocene indicates to dacite stratovolcanoes, and the Cotabato sedimentary basin.
sampling of a new and different mantle source. The Central Mindanao arc is poorly defined, however, the arc
The polarity of subduction is not clear because there is no is bound by the Cotabato fault and the Cotabato basin to the
significant seismicity beneath the Sulu arc. Older northwest- southwest and the Agusan-Davao trough to the east. The com-
dipping subduction of the Celebes Sea is suggested to have bined arc assemblage extends more than 350 km in a northerly
reversed to southeast-dipping subduction of the Sulu Sea on direction across southwest and central Mindanao.
the north side of the Sulu arc, which remained active until the In the Cotabato arc, Paleogene metavolcanic and metased-
late Pleistocene (Hamilton, 1979; Hutchison, 1989) due to imentary rocks are overlain by Miocene marine clastic and
collision of the Cagayan volcanic arc and Palawan (Rangin et carbonate rocks and intruded by an early to middle Miocene
al., 1990). However, in Sabah, where the Sulu arc can be diorite batholith and andesite to dacite hypabyssal stocks (Bu-
traced onshore into the Dent-Semporna arc, there is no evi- reau of Mines and Geo-Sciences, 1982). Plio-Pleistocene an-
dence for southeast-directed subduction on the north side of desitic flows, pyroclastic rocks and intrusions, and limited
the arc. Hall and Wilson (2000) and Hall (2002) suggested Quaternary dacite-andesite volcanic rocks characterize the
that after the Cagayan arc collision, the Celebes Sea began northwestern and southeastern portions of the onshore part
subducting in a northwest direction beneath the south side of of the arc.
the Sulu arc and this interpretation is favored by geochemical The Central Mindanao arc contains a sequence of Oligocene
evidence from Sabah (Chiang, 2002). to middle Miocene basalts, volcaniclastic and carbonate
Mineral deposit styles: Gold systems are localized in the rocks, and late Miocene andesite to basalt volcanic and ma-
Zamboanga and Semporna segments of the arc (Figs. 1213), rine clastic rocks locally intruded by Neogene diorites (Bu-
but no large deposits have been found. Gold occurrences in- reau of Mines and Geo-Sciences, 1982; Sajona et al., 1997).
clude alluvial deposits, small-scale mining centers, and sev- Active Quaternary basaltic and lesser andesitic volcanoes and
eral prospects. In Zamboanga, more than 12 precious and their eruptive products cover much of the region. The central
base metal deposits and prospects of Neogene to Pleistocene portion of Central Mindanao is underlain by fault-bound sliv-
age occur proximal to the Cotabato fault zone (Jimenez et al., ers of Cretaceous (?) ultramafic rocks (Sajona et al., 1997).
2002). These mineralized systems include intermediate-sulfi- The Cotobato trench is characterized by a shallow, north-
dation veins and stockworks (e.g., Sibutad), porphyry copper east-dipping Benioff zone, which is inferred to have developed
prospects (e.g., Labangan), and gold-rich volcanic-associated in recent times (Cardwell et al., 1980; Hutchison, 1989) and is

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not related to pre-Quaternary arc development. The east-dip- the northern portion of the Sangihe arc through the northern
ping Molucca slab, which extends to about 600 km beneath arm of Sulawesi and into the neck of Sulawesi, where it ends in
Mindanao, is inferred to have played a major role in Neogene the sinistral Palu fault (Fig. 14; Table 1; Hamilton, 1979). The
magmatism in both the Cotobato and Central Mindanao arcs. western portion of the arc overlies Sundaland continental crust
The Cotobato arc may continue to the north as the Masbate- and Cretaceous to Eocene metamorphic rocks, which are in-
Negros arc, however, reconstruction of a continuous volcano- truded by late Miocene to Pliocene granitoids (Kavalieris et al.,
plutonic arc across the Sulu-Zamboanga arc is uncertain. 1992). These rocks are overlain unconformably by Eocene to
Mineral deposit styles: The southern portion of the Coto- Oligocene marine basalt to andesite and sedimentary rocks that
bato arc includes porphyry Cu-Au, skarn and epithermal gold form part of an oceanic arc to the east of the Marisa region
occurrences and prospects associated with Neogene dioritic (Carlile et al., 1990; Kavalieris et al., 1992). Geochemical and
stocks to hypabyssal dacite porphyry bodies and diatremes lo- isotopic data from northwestern Sulawesi support the inferred
cally (Fig. 13; Sillitoe and Gappe, 1984). The Tampakan high- transition from continental- to oceanic-arc settings from west
sulfidation epithermal and/or porphyry Cu-Au deposit (270 t to east and indicate the presence of an underthrust fragment of
Au, 6.8 Mt Cu) occurs within the eroded flanks of a Pliocene the Australian continent that extends from the western edge of
(?) andesitic stratovolcano that lies unconformably on a North Sulawesi through the northern and central parts of west
northerly trending ramp anticline in the hanging wall to a re- Sulawesi (Elburg et al., 2003). The early to middle Miocene
gional east-directed thrust fault (Rohrlach et al., 1999). A syn- portion of the arc consists of andesitic to dacitic volcanic and
mineralization diorite porphyry dike is dated at 3.2 Ma (U/Pb volcaniclastic rocks and sedimentary rocks intruded by diorite,
by laser ablation ICP-MS; R. Loucks, pers. commun., 2002). quartz diorite, granodiorite, and their subvolcanic porphyritic
Enargite-bearing, high-sulfidation mineralization and ad- equivalents in the Gorontalo, Kotamobagu, and south Sangihe
vanced argillic alteration overprints the porphyry system from areas (Carlile et al., 1990; Kavalieris et al., 1992). A Pliocene
surface to depths of about 500 m, with relict K silicate alter- rhyodacitic pyroclastic sequence and flow dome complex char-
ation zones present at 600 m below surface (Rohrlach et al., acterizes the Gunung Pani area in Marisa (Kavalieris et al.,
1999). Small-scale mining centers are located at Tboli in 1990; Pearson and Caira, 1999). Quaternary andesitic strato-
South Cotobato, Tampakan in the Sarangani Range, and else- volcanoes define the arc from north of the Kotamobagu area
where in southern Mindanao. Gold is recovered from inter- through Sangihe Island.
mediate-sulfidation quartz veins hosted by Miocene volcanic Major northwesterly trending faults influence the distribu-
and volcaniclastic sequences. tion of volcanic and sedimentary rock successions in north Su-
Mitchell and Leach (1991) cited widespread epithermal lawesi. The movement along these faults is oblique-slip, with
mineralization in the Sarangani Range, which lies in the arc-parallel extension indicated by the progressive down-to-
southeastern part of the Cotobato arc. Small-scale mining the north movement of the fault blocks located north of Ko-
near Bukidnon is associated with narrow quartz veins hosted tamabagu (Carlile et al., 1990).
in phyllites and ultramafic rocks (Mitchell and Leach, 1991). Mineral deposit styles: Gold and copper deposits in the
The relationship of these veins to the Central Mindanao arc, north Sulawesi-Sangihe arc commonly lie <10 to 20 km from
if any, is unclear. major northwesterly trending arc-transverse oblique-slip
faults (Figs. 8, 14). Many of these deposits are hosted by early
Other Philippine arcs to middle Miocene andesitic volcanic rocks intruded by hy-
Additional Cenozoic magmatic arcs of the Philippines in- pabyssal intrusions. West of Marisa, the western sector of the
clude the Oligocene arcs of the Sierra Madre in central Luzon arc has a continental affinity and is characterized by alluvial
and the northeast Luzon-Polillo-Catanduanes in eastern gold derived from small orogenic lodes hosted by metamor-
Luzon (Fig. 12; Mitchell and Leach, 1991). Epithermal veins, phic basement (Kavalieris et al., 1992). The Gunung Pani
porphyry copper, skarn, and gold-bearing massive sulfide disseminated and stockwork intermediate-sulfidation gold
prospects and alluvial gold workings occur in the East Rizal deposit (41 t Au) is controlled by north-northeast and north-
region of the Sierra Madre arc. Gold-bearing, Besshi-type east-oriented faults in a rhyodacitic dome complex built upon
massive sulfide prospects exist in eastern Bicol and small ep- continental basement along the margin of Sundaland (Kava-
ithermal veins characterize prospects in Catanduanes Island. lieris et al., 1990). The deposit is 3.3 to 3.1 m.y. old (Ar-Ar;
In central Cebu, quartz-diorite porphyry intrusions, vol- Pearson and Caira, 1999) with gold contained in siliceous
canic and volcaniclastic rocks of probable Cretaceous age host limonitic and quartz-adularia lined fractures and mosaic
the gold-bearing Atlas porphyry Cu-Mo deposits (Sillitoe and quartz breccias (Carlile et al., 1990; Kavalieris et al., 1990).
Gappe, 1984). Cretaceous quartz diorite bodies also occur in The Gorontalo region hosts porphyry copper-gold deposits
Bohol, but these intrusions lack significant mineralization in the Tombulilato district, the Bolangitang intermediate-sul-
(Bureau of Mines and Geo-Sciences, 1982). Miocene an- fidation epithermal prospect, and the Motombato high-sulfi-
desitic volcanics occur on both islands and may be linked via dation epithermal system and contains >140 t gold and sub-
a paleoarc system. Alternatively, the Bohol arc may extend stantial copper resources (App. 4). These Pliocene systems
north beneath northwestern Leyte, as proposed by Mitchell (2.92.4 Ma; Perello, 1994) are hosted by Miocene volcanic
and Leach (1991). rocks and overlying dacite to rhyolite, which are intruded by
quartz diorite stocks (Lowder and Dow, 1978). The
North Sulawesi-Sangihe Tombulilato district lies ~10 to 20 km from a major north-
Geologic setting: The Miocene to Recent North Sulawesi- westerly oriented, arc-transverse dextral-fault zone (Pearson
Sangihe magmatic arc extends approximately 1,200 km from and Caira, 1999).

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In the Kotamobagu region, intermediate-sulfidation Neogene diorite to granodiorite bodies intrude the volcanic
stockwork veins in andesitic volcanic and volcaniclastic rocks rock sequences and are associated with porphyry Cu-Au-
at Lanut, Mintu, and Doup, and silicified middle Miocene (Mo) prospects on Bacan Island and gold prospects in the
limestone at Lobongan in the Ratatotok district, support small- northern part of the western arm of Halmahera Island. Vol-
scale mining activities. The north- to northeast-trending canic activity has ceased at the southern end of the arc, and
intermediate-sulfidation vein systems at Lanut and nearby the active volcanic arc moved west during the Pliocene (Hall
high-sulfidation lodes lie within a northwesterly corridor of et al., 1988b) and is now built on the western margin of the
mineral prospects that extends more than 30 km across the Neogene arc.
hinge portion of north Sulawesi. The Toka Tindung interme- Mineral deposit styles: A porphyry Cu-Au prospect occurs
diate-sulfidation vein system (2.4 Ma; Moyle et al., 1997) in at Kaputusan on Bacan Island, where it is associated with
northeastern Sulawesi is overlain by a Quaternary ash cover. anomalous molybdenum and bismuth (Fig. 14; van Leeuwen,
Host rocks consist of Neogene andesitic volcanic and volcani- 1994). This small resource is centered in a Neogene quartz
clastic rocks that overlie siliciclastic sedimentary rocks. The diorite intrusion in pre-Miocene volcanic host rocks (Carlile
main Toka Tindung and satellite deposits (35 t Au) form a se- and Mitchell, 1994; Malaihollo and Hall, 1996).
ries of en echelon, north-trending lodes that lie in a north- The Gosowong intermediate-sulfidation bonanza vein sys-
west-oriented structural corridor (Wake et al., 1996). tem in the northwestern arm of Halmahera Island contains
The sedimentary rock-hosted Mesel gold deposit in the nearly 27 t of gold at an average grade of 27 g/t (Olberg et al.,
Ratatotok district (62 t Au) has many similarities to Carlin- 1999). The steeply east dipping vein lies adjacent to a north-
type gold deposits in Nevada (Turner et al., 1994; Garwin et west-trending fault (Research Information Unit, 1997) that
al., 1995). In Mesel, most of the ore is controlled by steeply forms part of a major northwest-oriented topographic linea-
dipping faults and is hosted in a decalcified, dolomitized, and ment that extends through the western arm of Halmahera.
silicified middle Miocene carbonate sequence adjacent to, The deposit is hosted by a Neogene sequence of andesitic to
and beneath, a premineralization, porphyritic andesite laccol- dacitic volcanic rocks and subordinate volcaniclastic rocks.
ithic intrusion. The Taware porphyry Cu-Au prospect and the The age of mineralization is constrained to lie between 2.9 to
Bawone-Binebase high-sulfidation system on south Sangihe 2.4 Ma (Olberg et al., 1999). The recently discovered Ken-
Island are inferred to be of Miocene age (Carlile et al., 1990). cana and Toguraci intermediate-sulfidation vein systems lie 1
km south and 2 km southwest of Gosowong, respectively.
Halmahera Kencana, the larger of the two deposits, contains 70 t of gold
Geologic setting: This Neogene to Recent arc sweeps across at an average grade of 41 g/t in a quartz vein breccia (indi-
the western arm of the Halmahera Islands and includes cated plus inferred categories; Mining News, 2004). Kencana
Bacan and Obi Islands (Fig. 14; Table 1). The modern arc ex- is hosted by a northwest-trending, 35 to 55 northeast-dip-
tends 400 km from near the Philippine trench to the western ping, fault within a sequence of andesitic volcanic and vol-
extension of the Sorong fault. The basement to the arc con- caniclastic rocks (IAGI, 2004). Other mineralization in the
sists primarily of Cretaceous-Paleocene ophiolite in Halma- area includes intermediate-sulfidation epithermal and por-
hera, Bacan, and Obi (Hall et al., 1991), although there are phyry styles (Olberg et al., 1999). Small intermediate-sulfida-
Mesozoic and probable Precambrian gneiss and schist ex- tion veins occur on Obi Island, hosted in part by andesitic
posed on Bacan (Hamilton, 1979; Malaihollo and Hall, 1996). peperites (N. White, writ. commun., 2004).
The Halmahera region has a long history of arc activity. The
ophiolitic basement was formed in an intra-oceanic arc (Bal- Medial New Guinea
lantyne, 1992) and is overlain in Halmahera and Obi by prod- Geologic setting: New Guinea can be divided into four
ucts of a Late Cretaceous arc and in Halmahera, Bacan, and major structural-stratigraphic belts, from south to north: (1)
Obi by an Eocene to Oligocene arc (Hall et al., 1988a, b, the stable northern margin of the Australian craton (Fly plat-
1995; Ali and Hall, 1995; Malaihollo and Hall, 1996). These form), (2) Papuan fold belt, (3) New Guinea mobile belt, and
arcs formed as the result of subduction at the margin of the (4) allochthonous Paleogene volcanic island arcs accreted in
Philippine Sea plate in an intra-oceanic setting, and arc activ- the Miocene (Fig. 15; Dow, 1977; Hamilton, 1979; Pigram
ity was terminated between the late Oligocene and early and Davies, 1987; Rogerson and McKee, 1990; Hall, 2002).
Miocene by collision with the north Australian margin (Hall, The suture zones between the accreted island arcs and mo-
1996). During the middle Miocene, there was little or no arc bile belts are typically marked by craton-directed overthrusts
activity and platform carbonates were deposited over a large of Paleogene ophiolite and mlange (Dow, 1977; Hamilton,
area and arc activity resumed in the late middle Miocene. All 1979). The late Miocene to Pleistocene medial Irian Jaya
these rocks form the basement to the Neogene Halmahera magmatic arc of Carlile and Mitchell (1994) lies within the
arc, which was active from about 11 Ma between Obi in the Papuan fold belt, where south-directed compressional tec-
south and Morotai at the north end of the island chain (Baker tonics have led to localized deformation, crustal thickening,
and Malaihollo, 1996). The active arc shows geochemical ev- and block uplift during the Plio-Pleistocene to Recent
idence of a continental crustal contribution to magmas on (Hamilton, 1979; Weiland and Cloos, 1996; Hill and Raza,
Bacan (Morris et al., 1983) and a similar contribution can be 1999). The medial New Guinea magmatic belt, as defined in
identified in the Neogene lavas on Bacan (Forde, 1997), this paper, extends more than 1,500 km along the central
which indicates movement of Australian continental frag- crest of New Guinea, includes the Quaternary stratovolca-
ments along strands of the Sorong fault, as first suggested by noes near Bosavi, and continues to the southeast through the
Hamilton (1979). Owen Stanley thrust belt to the Papuan peninsula and nearby

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DEntrecasteaux Islands (Dow, 1977; Rogerson and McKee, Arnold, 1994). The main Grasberg intrusion cooled extremely
1990; McDowell et al., 1996). The basement consists of a rapidly, as indicated by nearly identical ages determined by
thick sequence of Paleozoic sedimentary rocks in Irian Jaya Re-Os (2.9 0.3 Ma on sulfide), Ar-Ar (3.33 0.123.01
and Paleozoic metamorphic rocks and Permo-Triassic granite 0.06 Ma on biotite), and (U-Th)/He (3.12.9 0.1 Ma on ap-
overlain by Mesozoic siliciclastic rocks in Papua New Guinea atite), which supports the interpretation that the intrusive
(Hamilton, 1979; Dow and Sukamto, 1984; Pigram and complex was emplaced within ~1 km of the paleosurface
Davies, 1987; Hill and Raza, 1999). (Weiland and Cloos, 1996; McInnes et al., 2004). The Gras-
The late Miocene to Pleistocene high K calc-alkaline to K berg complex occurs about the intersection of northeast-
alkaline intrusions (e.g., intrusive complexes at Porgera, Gras- trending, sinistral strike-slip fault systems with steeply north-
berg, and Ok Tedi; McDowell et al., 1996) in the Central east dipping reverse faults (MacDonald and Arnold, 1994) in
Ranges of New Guinea do not overlie a well-defined Benioff the hanging wall to a major frontal thrust (Hill et al, 2002).
zone and lack coeval subaerial volcanic rocks. However, this The vertical ore distribution exceeds 1,500 m.
paucity of volcanic rocks may in part reflect the extensive up- The Pleistocene (1.2 Ma) Ok Tedi porphyry Cu-Au system
lift and erosion of the region (e.g., average exhumation rates (441 t Au, 4.5 Mt Cu; App. 5) is centered on monzonite por-
of ~0.71.7 mm/yr since the mid-Pliocene; Weiland and phyry stocks and breccia dikes, emplaced in Middle to Late
Cloos, 1996). The distribution of these intrusions coincides Cretaceous siltstone and sandstone (Rush and Seegers, 1990).
with the margins of uplifted basement blocks adjacent to Lenses of copper-gold-magnetite and sulfide skarn locally
north-northeast to northeast-trending lineaments defined by occur within this rock sequence. The vertical distribution of
faults, volcanoes, and drainage patterns (e.g., Grasberg, Ok ore exceeds 600 m, including an oxidized gold-rich cap that
Tedi, Porgera, Bosavi, Murray, and Bulolo lineaments; Fig. formed an annulus to the quartz stockwork core of the de-
15; Davies, 1991; Corbett, 1994; Fischer and Warburton, posit in the leached cap, prior to mining (Rush and Seegers,
1996; Hill et al., 2002; Pubellier and Ego, 2002). These linea- 1990). Ok Tedi occurs in the core of a west-trending doubly
ments parallel the structural trend of basement rocks, as in- plunging anticline in the hanging wall to a major frontal thrust
ferred from aeromagnetic data (The Australian Petroleum that lies along a major northeast-trending basement fault in-
Company Proprietary, 1961) and locally define boundaries to ferred from the distribution of regional-scale folds and Plio-
domains of differing structural styles in the Papuan fold belt Pleistocene intrusions (Mason, 1996; Mason and Ord, 1999).
(e.g., Ok Tedi; Mason, 1994, 1996). These relationships have Ok Tedi is the largest porphyry-skarn complex of several sys-
led Hill et al. (2002) and others to infer the localization of in- tems that formed in the Star Mountains contemporaneous to
trusions at high crustal levels along dilatent segments of reac- Plio-Pleistocene thrust faulting (Arnold and Griffin, 1978).
tivated, orogen-parallel extensional Mesozoic basement faults The Ertsberg skarn complex, 2 km southeast of the Gras-
near intersections with south-directed frontal thrusts. In con- berg porphyry deposit, includes the Ertsberg, Ertsberg East,
trast, there is no clear relationship between thrust faults and Intermediate, and Deep ore zones, DOM, and Big Gossan
the Pliocene (3.22.8 Ma) calc-alkaline intrusions that occur copper-gold skarn deposits. Combined past production and
south of the Sorong fault system in the Birds Head at Aisas- present reserves in the Ertsberg skarn deposits exceed 140 t
jur, Papua (Paddy Waters, writ. commun., 2004). of gold and 3.8 Mt of copper (Mertig et al., 1994; van
The southward migration of K-rich magmatism and related Leeuwen, 1994). The majority of the gold and copper re-
mineralization follows the southward progression of fold and sources are hosted in the Erstberg East (Intermediate and
thrust belt deformation (Davies, 1991), with intrusion-related Deep ore zones) orebody (189 t Au, 2.4 Mt Cu) in one of the
mineral deposits forming in zones of major uplift at the inter- largest Cu-bearing magnesian skarns in the world (Mertig et
section between frontal thrusts and orogen-transverse strike- al., 1994; Coutts et al., 1999). The skarns are hosted within or
slip (transfer) fault zones (Hill et al, 2002). The source of the adjacent to the Pliocene Ertsberg intrusion (3.12.6 Ma;
K-rich magmas is ambiguous. Favored possibilities include de- Mertig et al., 1994; Meinert et al., 1997). The subsurface,
layed partial melting of the mantle modified by previous (?Cre- Kucing Liar magnetite-copper-gold skarn, about 500 m
taceous) subduction beneath the continental margin, prior to southwest of the Grasberg intrusive complex, contains more
the accretion of allochthonous arc terranes in the mid-Miocene than 450 t Au (Widodo et al., 1999). The protolith lithologies
(Johnson et al., 1978) and asthenospheric upwelling due to the for the Ertsberg skarns consist of a basal dolomitic unit and
docking of arc terranes transported from the east (McDowell an upper limestone sequence of early Tertiary age (New
et al., 1996). The results of mantle tomographic imaging sup- Guinea Group Limestone; Mertig et al., 1994).
port the existence of ancient subduction slabs within the man- The Wabu Ridge gold skarn in the Hitalipa district, 35 km
tle beneath New Guinea (Hall and Spakman, 2002). north of Grasberg-Erstberg, contains a geologic resource of
Mineral deposit styles: This belt contains the Carstenz dis- more than 250 t Au and occurs along the margin of a late
trict, which includes the Grasberg porphyry Cu-Au deposit, Miocene to early Pliocene K alkaline intrusive-extrusive com-
the Ertsberg Cu-Au skarn complex, and a gold-rich skarn at plex (6.65.2 Ma; OConnor et al., 1999). The deposit is
Wabu. Grasberg contains a resource of 4,000 Mt at 0.64 g/t hosted by an Oligocene sequence of limestone and calcareous
Au (2,560 t) and 0.6 percent Cu (24 Mt; Figs. 1415, App. 4; siltstone in a south-vergent anticline-thrust fault complex,
van Leeuwen, 1994). The proven and probable reserve of the close to the intersection of a northeast-trending sinistral
combined open-pit and underground deposits totals 1950 t of strike-slip fault (OConnor et al., 1999).
gold (year-end 1998; Widodo et al., 1999). The deposit is The Porgera mine in the New Guinea Highlands contains
hosted by Pliocene diorite to monzonite stocks (3.32.7 Ma) two major stages of gold mineralization, early intermediate-
and an andesite-diorite diatreme complex (MacDonald and sulfidation type within the open-pit (premine reserve: 54 Mt

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5.8 g/t Au) and late high-grade ?low-sulfidation type in zone The Pliocene Tolukuma intermediate-sulfidation quartz-
VII, which lies along the Roamane fault at a depth of 200 to adularia-carbonate vein system, 100 km north of Port
500 m beneath surface (premine reserve: 5.9 Mt at 27 g/t Au; Moresby, is high grade (1.5 Mt at 13.8 g/t Au). The deposit is
Handley and Bradshaw, 1986; Handley and Henry, 1990; associated with phreatomagmatic breccias in the hanging wall
Richards and Kerrich, 1993; Sillitoe and Hedenquist, 2003). of a normal fault that juxtaposes andesitic volcanic rocks
Both stages of mineralization are related to the 6.0 0.3 Ma against footwall Owen Stanley Metamorphics (Semple et al.,
emplacement of the mafic (diorite-gabbro) sodic-alkalic 1998).
Porgera Intrusive Complex within Jurassic carbonaceous silt-
stones and Cretaceous calcareous shales (Handley and Henry, Maramuni
1990; Richards, 1990; Richards and McDougall, 1990). The Geologic setting: The Maramuni arc forms a belt of
early stage consists of disseminated pyrite and quartz-carbon- Miocene calc-alkaline, intermediate to mafic volcanic and in-
ate-base metal sulfide veins and associated sericite-carbonate trusive rocks that extends ~1,000 km across the southwestern
alteration; the later stage consists of quartz-roscoelite (V- margin of the New Guinea mobile belt from near the Irian
bearing sericite)-adularia veins and breccias with native gold Jaya border to 100 km southeast of Port Moresby (Fig. 15;
and minor pyrite and Au-Ag telluride minerals (Handley and Table 1; Page, 1976; Dow, 1977; Rogerson and McKee, 1990;
Bradshaw, 1986; Ronacher et al., 1999). The presence of McDowell et al., 1996; Hill and Raza, 1999). Arc magmatism
magnetite-chalcopyrite-pyrrhotite and biotite-actinolite-an- is inferred to be related to the subduction of the Solomon Sea
hydrite in the early-stage assemblage at more than 1,000 m beneath the Papuan Peninsula and eastern New Guinea, fol-
below zone VII (Ronacher et al., 1999) provides a potential lowing the early to mid-Miocene collision of the Ontong Java
link to porphyry-style mineralization at depth. The duration plateau with the Melanesian arc and the southwestward jump
of the hydrothermal system, including both early and late in subduction zones, from the Melanesian to the Marumuni
stages of mineralization, is ~100,000 yrs, as constrained by the trench (Cullen and Pigott, 1989; Hill and Raza, 1999; Hall,
40
Ar/39Ar laser dating method (Ronacher et al., 2002). 2002). The basement to the arc includes pre-Triassic metavol-
Intermediate-sulfidation gold systems occur at Hidden Val- canic rocks and granite in the Papuan fold belt (Papuan
ley, Kerimenge, Hamata, and Wau in the Wau-Bulolo graben province) and variably metamorphosed, latest Cretaceous to
(Carswell, 1990; Hutton et al., 1990; Nelson et al., 1990; Paleogene mlange and ophiolite in the New Guinea and
Denwer and Mowat, 1998). This graben is an intra-arc rift Owen Stanley thrust belts (Solomon province; Hamilton,
basin formed in the Pliocene as a result of movement along 1979; Pigram and Davies, 1987; Rogerson and McKee, 1990).
inferred northeast-trending strike-slip faults in a basement of The arc has been exhumed at least 3 to 4 km mainly from 8
Cretaceous to Paleogene schist and phyllite (Owen Stanley to 5 Ma, due to the late Miocene collision of the Finisterre-
Metamorphics) that was intruded by the mid-Miocene Mo- Adelbert (Melanesian) arc, which caused regional uplift of
robe Granodiorite (Lowenstein, 1982; Dekker et al., 1990; northern Papua New Guinea (Crowhurst et al., 1996). This
Corbett, 1994). The deposits are typically associated with exhumation exposed mid-Miocene batholiths east of the
faults and late-stage breccia bodies and diatremes related to Bosavi lineament, including the Bismark (1713 Ma), Mara-
mid-Pliocene dacite to andesite porphyry intrusions (e.g., muni Diorite (1510 Ma), Akuna (1715 Ma) and Morobe
Edie Porphyry; Carswell, 1990). The common ore type con- Granodiorite (1412 Ma) intrusive complexes (Page and Mc-
sists of quartz-carbonate-base metal sulfide veins and related Dougall, 1972; Page, 1976; Lowenstein, 1982; Hall et al.,
sericite-quartz-pyrite alteration. These systems contain more 1990). The margins of these batholiths serve as the locus for
than 190 t Au at grades that range from 1.0 to 3.7 g/t Au. the emplacement of late Miocene porphyries and related
The ore mineralogy and paragenetic sequence of events at copper-gold mineralization (e.g., Yandera porphyry; Watmuff,
the Pliocene Umuna lode, Misima Island (77 t Au) is similar 1978).
to those described for the deposits of the Bulolo graben Mineral deposit styles: Middle to late Miocene Cu-Au por-
(Lewis and Wilson, 1990; Appleby et al., 1996). At Umuna, phyry and skarn mineralization styles are associated with dior-
pyritic quartz and quartz-carbonate veins fill a steeply dipping ite to granodiorite porphyritic intrusions in the Marumuni arc
fault zone in greenschist facies metamorphic rocks (Lewis (Fig. 15). The subeconomic Frieda River porphyry system de-
and Wilson, 1990). The Plio-Pleistocene Gameta and Wapola veloped between 13.6 and 11.5 Ma and has a mean K/Ar age
intermediate-sulfidation gold deposits (4.2 t Au) on Fergus- of 11.9 Ma (Whalen et al., 1982). The major orebodies,
son Island share characteristics with the style of mineraliza- Horse-Ivaal and Koki, are centered on small, elongate calc-al-
tion at Misima (Appleby et al., 1996). Gameta and Wapola are kaline microdiorite stocks (<1.5 km in length), cut by late-
localized along gently to moderately dipping detachment stage andesite porphyry and postmineralization trachyan-
faults related to metamorphic core complexes that place Cre- desite dikes (Hall et al, 1990). The estimated depth of
taceous or older ultramafic rocks of the Solomon Sea plate on emplacement of the porphyry complex is 1.5 to 2 km beneath
pre-Cretaceous gneiss and amphibolite of the Australian cra- paleosurface (Hall et al., 1990). The Nena high-sulfidation
ton (McNeil, 1990; Chapple and Ibil, 1998). Pliocene gran- Cu-Au deposit, 7 km northwest of Frieda, formed contempo-
odioritic plutons form the core to the domal uplifts. The core raneously with the Frieda porphyry deposits (Hall et al.,
complexes are inferred to have formed from late Pliocene to 1990). The deposit is hosted by a middle Miocene sequence
Recent time in response to isostatic uplift of subducted sialic of andesitic lapilli tuff, directly beneath an andesitic lava unit
continental crust through overlying, obducted oceanic crust (Bainbridge et al., 1998). Hypogene covellite, stibnoluzonite,
and rifting due to the westerly propagation of the Woodlark and luzonite-enargite are the primary ore minerals hosted by
basin spreading center (Chapple and Ibil, 1998). residual quartz alteration. The deposit formed at a similar

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structural-stratigraphic level to the porphyry deposits with The origin of the shoshonitic K alkaline Tabar-Feni Island
ore distributed over a vertical extent of ~300 m (Bainbridge chain, which lies approximately 400 km above the New Britain
et al., 1998). The Frieda and Nena deposits lie along the subduction slab, is less evident. However, Pliocene to Recent
northeast-trending zone of faults and intrusions that extend magmatism in this arc could originate from subduction
southwest through Ok Tedi, which Bainbridge et al. (1998) modified mantle and be related to north-trending rifting of
suggested represents a basement fault that has localized the the outer Melanesian arc during the opening of the Bismarck
southwestward migration of magmatism from mid-Miocene Sea, which commenced at ~3.5 Ma (Johnson, 1979; Wallace
at Frieda to Pleistocene at Ok Tedi. et al., 1983; McInnes and Cameron, 1994). A subarc mantle
The middle Miocene Wafi porphyry and coeval high-sulfi- source to Lihir Island magmatism is supported by the simi-
dation system contains in excess of 107 t Au and 1.3 Mt Cu larity between 187Os/188Os values from samples of gold ore
(Tau-Loi and Andrew, 1998). The Wafi deposits are hosted by and related intrusions from the Ladolam deposit and the pre-
siliciclastic rocks of the Owen Stanley Metamorphics, in- sent-day mantle (187Os/188Os value of 0.1217), as sampled
truded by diorite to dacite porphyry stocks, adjacent to two from xenoliths collected from a nearby sea-floor volcano
major northeast-trending faults (Ercig et al., 1991; Tau-Loi (McInnes et al., 1999).
and Andrew, 1998). The porphyry system is centered on a The geologic basement to the Melanesian arc is not ex-
diorite stock, less than 300 m in diameter, concealed beneath posed but is inferred to be pre-Eocene oceanic crust (Hall,
a leached cap of residual quartz and is extensively overprinted 2002) The oldest rocks exposed include Eocene calc-alkaline
by advanced argillic alteration that extends to ~450 m be- pillow lavas, volcaniclastic rocks, minor limestone, and rare
neath surface; the relict potassic zone is preserved at ~600-m gabbroic intrusions (Dow, 1977; Rogerson and McKee, 1990).
depth. The depth of porphyry-style mineralization exceeds The northwest-trending faults that extend across eastern New
900 m. Several enargite-bearing residual quartz-hosted gold Britain, New Hanover, and southern New Ireland Islands are
zones occur near fault intersections with the margin of the 1.0 inferred to link to offshore transform faults that separate
by 0.6 km Wafi diatreme (Ercig et al., 1991; Tau-Loi and An- northeast-oriented spreading ridges in the Bismarck Sea
drew, 1998). Secondary K-feldspar in the potassic zone of the (Falvey and Pritchard, 1982; Rogerson and McKee, 1990).
porphyry deposit indicates a K/Ar date of 14 Ma, whereas, North-trending horst blocks form the foundation for the Is-
alunite from the advanced argillic zone returns a K/Ar date of lands of the Tabar-Feni chain and localize Pliocene to recent
13 Ma (Tau-Loi and Andrew, 1998). volcanism on Lihir Island (Moyle et al., 1990). On
A subeconomic porphyry Cu-Au system is associated with Bougainville Island, northwest-trending faults and lineaments
mid- to late Miocene dacitic to dioritic stocks at Yandera (97 localize the distribution of Pleistocene to Recent volcanoes,
Ma; Watmuff, 1978) and a small gold skarn occurs adjacent to where more than 1,200 m of uplift has occurred since the
the Elandora andesite to granodiorite porphyry (late early Miocene (Clark, 1990).
Miocene?) at Mount Victor in Kainantu (Abiari et al., 1990). Mineral deposit styles: The Melanesian arc hosts early
At Mount Victor, the causal Elandora porphyries are localized Miocene (2522 Ma) Cu-Au porphyry (skarn) prospects,
along the margins of the mid-Miocene Akuna batholith and such as Esis, Plesyumi, and Kulu (Hine and Mason, 1978;
Cretaceous Mount Victor Granodiorite (Abiari et al., 1990). Hine et al., 1978; Titley, 1978) and the Wild Dog high-sulfida-
tion deposit (Lindley, 1990) on New Britain, and the Legusu-
Melanesian (inner and outer) lum porphyry prospect on New Ireland (Fig. 15; Rogerson and
Geologic setting: The calc-alkaline Melanesian arc, as de- McKee, 1990; Singer et al., 2002). The Arie and Mount Kren
scribed in this paper, from west to southeast, includes the ac- porphyry systems on Manus Island are middle Miocene
creted portions of the Finisterre-Adelbert arcs in northeast- (1513 Ma; Singer et al., 2002). The Arie deposit is the largest
ern New Guinea and New Britain Island (inner Melanesian of all the Miocene systems (165 Mt at 0.32% Cu) and is related
arc) and the Manus, New Ireland, and Bougainville Islands to diorite porphyry and breccia bodies hosted by basaltic to an-
(outer Melanesian arc; Fig. 15; Table 1), which corresponds desitic volcanic and volcaniclastic rocks (Singer et al., 2002).
to the Finisterre province of Rogerson and McKee (1990). The Pliocene (3.4 Ma) Panguna copper-gold porphyry de-
The Melanesian arc represents the northerly continuation of posit (768 t Au, 6.4 Mt Cu) on Bougainville Island is centered
the Solomon arc, which began development in the Eocene to on a series of diorite, quartz diorite, and granodiorite stocks
early Oligocene in response to southwest-directed subduc- localized along the margin of a premineralization (~54 Ma)
tion of the Pacific plate (Falvey and Pritchard, 1982; Hall, quartz diorite pluton (Clark, 1990). The following description
2002). The collision of the Ontong Java plateau in the early is based on that of Clark (1990). Intrusive breccia pipes in the
Miocene jammed the Melanesian trench with a general hia- surrounding andesitic volcanic sequence and along intrusive
tus in arc magmatism from the mid- to late Miocene until contacts host high-grade ore (>1.0 g/t Au and 1.0% Cu).
northeast-directed subduction was established beneath the Mapped faults and regional lineaments defined from side-
New Britain trench in the earliest Pliocene (~6 Ma; Hall, looking airborne radar indicate two populations: west-north-
2002). Magmatism continues through to the present. The west trends, which correspond to the elongate dimensions
configuration of the arc system is largely due to the modifica- of synmineralization diorite stock and related dikes, and
tion of the mid-Oligocene arc by westerly transport of the northeast trends, which parallel late-stage pebble dikes and
inner Melanesian arc toward New Guinea, which led to postmineralization (1.6 Ma) andesite dikes. The deposit ex-
accretion of the Finisterre-Adelbert terranes in the late tends from surface to a depth of ~650 m.
Miocene (Pigram and Davies, 1987; Crowhurst et al., 1996; The Pleistocene (~0.3 Ma) Ladolam gold deposit (1,378 t Au)
Hall, 2002). on Lihir Island lies in the floor of the K alkaline Quaternary

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Luise caldera, in the hanging wall of a north-northeasttrend- about 4 to 3 Ma as a result of collision between the arc and
ing normal fault (Moyle et al., 1990; Carman, 1995, 2003). the Australian margin in Timor (Carter et al., 1976). Clastic
Three major styles of hydrothermal alteration are evident. and carbonate sedimentary rocks are intercalated with the
Early porphyry-style potassic (biotite-orthoclase-albite-anhy- volcanic sequences of both generations of arc. The Neogene
drite) and propylitic (calcite-chlorite-K-feldspar-albite-K- arc is characterized by calc-alkaline andesitic to dacitic vol-
mica) alteration types are overprinted by transitional epither- canic rocks and their intrusive equivalents in Sumatra, and
mal adularia and late epithermal silicic, argillic, and advanced basaltic to andesitic volcanic rocks and intrusions of calc-alka-
argillic alteration styles (Carman, 2003). The superposition of line and tholeiitic affinities in the JavaFlores and east Banda
these types of alteration and a range of K/Ar dates obtained sectors (Hamilton, 1979; Hutchison, 1989; Soerja-Atmadja et
from hydrothermal minerals (1.00.2 Ma for biotite, K- al., 1994). Dacitic to rhyolitic suites occur locally and are par-
feldspar, and illite, and 0.15 Ma for alunite) led Moyle et al. ticularly abundant in the Alor, Wetar, and Romang sectors.
(1990) and Carman (1995) to call upon catastrophic sector Quaternary basaltic to dacitic, and locally rhyolitic, volcanic
collapse of the Luise stratovolcano (present rim elevation of products cover older volcanic rocks throughout much of the
~700 m) and the telescoping of the hydrothermal system arc.
from porphyry to epithermal conditions at ~0.3 Ma. The gold Mineral deposit styles: The arc is characterized by interme-
in the deposit is mostly contained in epithermal, pyrite-marc- diate-sulfidation vein systems at Mangani, Salida, Lebong
asite-arsenopyrite breccia and quartz-calcite vein ore types Tandai/Donok, and Lampung in Sumatra and also in West
that typically extend from near sea level to 200 m below Java (Fig. 14, App. 4). The geologic basement to Sumatra and
(Moyle et al., 1990; Carman, 2003). Sillitoe and Hedenquist western Java consists of Sundaland continental crust, where
(2003) interpret the epithermal event at Ladolam to be low no direct link between the intermediate-sulfidation deposits
sulfidation, on the basis of the extensional back-arc setting and coeval intrusions is apparent. Nearly 80 t Au was pro-
and alkaline host rocks. duced from high-grade lodes (~15 g/t Au) in Lebong Tandai
and Lebong Donok in the Bengkulu district by the Dutch
Sunda-Banda prior to 1941 (Kavalieris, 1988; van Leeuwen, 1994). Lebong
Geologic setting: This Eocene to Recent arc extends nearly Tandai is hosted by Miocene andesitic volcanic rocks and
4,000 km from northwestern Sumatra through Java and ter- Lebong Donok occurs in Miocene carbonaceous shale associ-
minates in the Banda Island group of eastern Indonesia (Fig. ated with the brecciated margins of a competent dacite intru-
14; Table 1). The basement to the arc varies from Mesozoic to sion (Kavalieris, 1988). The Tandai lode is localized along a
late Paleozoic platform sedimentary rocks deposited on con- steeply dipping east-west fault system, which is offset by
tinental crust that are intruded by two mica granites in Suma- northeast- and northwest-oriented strike-slip faults (Jobson et
tra, through Cretaceous to Tertiary melange and ophiolite in al., 1994). Tandai, Donok, and Rawas, to the east, occur
central and eastern Java, to oceanic crust in the Banda arc within 20 to 30 km of the Sumatra fault near major east- and
(Hamilton, 1979). northeast-trending arc-transverse faults.
An Eocene to early Miocene calc-alkaline arc, the Old An- At Miwah in Aceh, northern Sumatra, a high-sulfidation
desites of van Bemmelen (1949), extends through Sumatra system is hosted by north-trending, tensional fracture zones
and Java and continues eastward toward the Banda arc. The in andesitic to dacitic volcanic rocks, intruded by a Pliocene
dextral Sumatra fault follows the arc and is inferred by Hamil- rhyodacite within 25 km of the Sumatra fault (Williamson and
ton (1979) to have been active since the late Oligocene; more Fleming, 1995). The Tangse porphyry Cu-(Mo) prospect oc-
recent work indicates the fault became active during the curs 40 km to the northwest of Miwah and is hosted by a mid-
Miocene (McCarthy and Elders, 1997). Although the term dle to late Miocene plutonic complex (van Leeuwen et al.,
Old Andesites has given the impression that the arc is an- 1987). At Martabe, east of Sibolga and south of Lake Toba,
desitic, and such rocks are the most obvious arc products, recently discovered disseminated high-sulfidation deposits
dacitic rocks are widespread, as minor intrusions, lavas, and are hosted by multistage phreatomagmatic breccias and
pyroclastic and ash deposits. The dacitic rocks have been dacitic flow dome complexes localized by extensional faults
overlooked because they have commonly been reworked into adjacent to a strand of the Sumatra fault (Levet et al., 2003;
sedimentary sequences (Smyth et al., 2003) but show that arc Sutopo et al., 2003). Early, texture-destructive, residual
activity began in the Eocene in Java. Arc activity ceased, or quartz alteration zones are tabular and partly controlled by
significantly declined, in the early Miocene and there was the moderate dips of local breccia units and underlying por-
widespread deposition of sedimentary rocks, especially car- phyritic andesite adjacent to steeply dipping dilational faults.
bonates, between Java and Sumba. This style of advanced argillic alteration serves as preparation
Arc activity resumed in the late middle Miocene, and a for subsequent gold depositional events. Gold is associated
middle Miocene to Recent magmatic arc is built on older sed- with late-stage fracture- and breccia-controlled enargite-lu-
imentary and volcanic rocks in most of the Sunda-Banda arc, zonite mineralization and, to a lesser extent, earlier, interme-
and in Java lies to the north of the axis of the older arc. The diate-sulfidation chalcedony veins (Levet et al., 2003). More
volcanic arc has propagated east into the Banda region since than five deposits occur over a 7-km strike length, the largest
about 12 Ma; the volcanic rocks east of Sumbawa are less than of which, Purnama, has a resource of 116 t Au.
9 Ma old and the volcanoes become progressively younger Gunung Pongkor (103 t Au at 17.1 g/t Au) in western Java
eastward (Abbott and Chamalaun, 1981; Honthaas et al., is a low sulfide intermediate-sulfidation bonanza vein system
1998). Volcanism continues to the present day, although hosted by Miocene andesitic tuffs and breccias and a subvol-
Banda arc volcanic activity ceased in the Wetar region at canic andesite intrusion (Basuki et al., 1994). The Pongkor

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vein system consists of four main northwesterly trending veins hosted in argillically altered felsic volcanic breccias of
that define a northeast-oriented corridor. This corridor extends Miocene age. Most of the copper is contained in enargite,
through the Bayah dome to the southwest, where it controls which is atypical of volcanic-associated massive sulfide sys-
the distribution of several vein systems in the historic Cikotok tems. The age of mineralization is believed to lie between 5
mining district. The host rocks in the Bayah dome consist of and 4 Ma (van Leeuwen, 1994; Sewell and Wheatley, 1994).
Pliocene volcanic and clastic sequences, which locally are in- The Wetar deposits were formed in north elongate exten-
truded by premineralization porphyritic dacite stocks. Individ- sional basins developed by the interaction of steeply dipping,
ual lodes are hosted by steeply dipping north-northeast- and north-northwest and north-northeast trending conjugate
north-northwesttrending faults. The northerly orientation and strike-slip faults inferred from the description of the geologic
dilational character of these lodes are consistent with their de- setting of the deposits in Sewell and Wheatley (1994).
velopment as a response to north-directed subduction in this
sector of the arc. The age of intermediate-sulfidation vein min- Central Kalimantan
eralization obtained from adularia is 8.5 Ma, which differs from Geologic setting: The Paleogene to Miocene Central Kali-
the 2.1 to 1.5 Ma ages determined for other epithermal lode mantan arc of Carlile and Mitchell (1994) extends approxi-
systems in the region (Marcoux and Milesi, 1994). mately 1,200 km from western Sarawak, through northwest
The style of mineralization changes to the east. In the and central Kalimantan into northeastern Kalimantan (Fig.
LombokSumbawa portion of the arc, which is underlain by 14; Table 1). The trace of the arc disappears to the northeast,
oceanic crust, high-sulfidation epithermal and porphyry Cu- beneath the western onshore extension of the Neogene Sulu-
Au deposits and prospects are present. The Batu Hijau por- Zamboanga arc in the Semporna peninsula of Sabah. The
phyry copper-gold deposit in southwest Sumbawa contains basement to the arc is continental in western Kalimantan,
more than 366 t Au and 4.8 Mt Cu (Clode et al., 1999) and where the oldest rocks exposed consist of late Paleozoic mica
occurs in an uplifted crustal block, which has been exhumed schists intruded by Triassic to Carboniferous and Cretaceous
about 2 km since the mid-Pliocene (Garwin, 2002a). Mineral- (Schwaner Massif) granites (Hamilton, 1979; Hutchison,
ization is genetically related to three stages of Neogene 1989). In contrast, Late Cretaceous to Paleogene ophiolite,
tonalite porphyry intrusions emplaced in quartz diorite and arc volcanic and sedimentary rocks comprise the basement to
andesitic volcaniclastic wall rocks. The tonalite porphyry com- the arc in eastern Kalimantan and Sabah. In the Bau area of
plex was emplaced over a span of ~100,000 yrs at ~3.7 Ma west Sarawak, Triassic andesitic arc volcanic rocks are over-
(Fletcher et al., 2000; Garwin, 2002a; McInnes et al., 2004). lain by Jurassic and Cretaceous marine carbonate and silici-
A late mineralization diatreme occurs about 2 km northwest clastic rock sequences interpreted by Hutchison (1989) to
of Batu Hijau. The deposit occurs in the central portion of a have been deposited along the marginal shelf of Sundaland.
district characterized by several porphyry centers, peripheral The arc is defined by the discontinuous distribution of ero-
intermediate-sulfidation vein systems, and distal, sedimentary sional remnants of calc-alkaline andesitic, trachyandesitic, and
rock-hosted replacement-style mineralization (Meldrum et local dacitic volcanic-plutonic centers, inferred to be associated
al., 1994; Irianto and Clark, 1995; Garwin, 2002a). Local con- with tonalite, granodiorite, and granite intrusions in western
trols include the intersections of northeast- and northwest- (Sintang intrusive suite) and northeastern (Long Lai intrusive
trending fault zones with the margins of premineralization suite) Kalimantan (Carlile and Mitchell, 1994). Arc activity is
quartz diorite plutons. still poorly dated and may extend from the Eocene. Arc con-
Enargite-gold veins at Elang, 60 km east of Batu Hijau, struction is related to south-directed subduction beneath the
occur close to a porphyry copper-gold system, which formed Rajang accretionary complex of northwest Borneo in the
at ~2.7 Ma (Maula and Levet, 1996; Garwin, 2000). Batu Oligocene to Miocene by Carlile and Mitchell (1994). Arc ac-
Hijau and Elang occur within 20 to 30 km of a major left-lat- tivity diminished after early Miocene collision between the
eral oblique-slip fault zone that controls the distribution of continental crust of the South China Sea margin and the active
Miocene volcano-sedimentary units, Pliocene intrusions, and margin of northern Borneo (Hutchison et al., 2000; Hall and
the present coastline of Sumbawa. Wilson, 2000). About ~1.3 km of exhumation from 25 to 23 Ma
Base metal-rich, intermediate-sulfidation epithermal barite and the eastward shift of the Kutai basin sedimentation mark
and quartz vein prospects are hosted in andesitic to dacitic this tectono-magmatic event (Moss et al., 1998). The distribu-
volcanic rocks and intercalated sedimentary rocks in the tion of igneous rocks and middle to late Tertiary sedimentary
West Flores, East Lomblen-Pantar, Wetar, and Romang re- basins indicates that northwest-trending arc-transverse faults
gions of the Banda arc. In Romang, vein-style mineralization played a role in arc tectonics and magmatism (Fig. 8).
is localized in a dilational zone along a west-northwesttrend- The sedimentary rocks of the Tertiary Kutei basin are lo-
ing dextral strike-slip fault corridor (Garwin and Herryansjah, cally intercalated with arc-related pyroclastic rocks in eastern
1992). Local jasperoid replacing reefal limestone character- Kalimantan. Hamilton (1979) inferred that the development
izes several prospects in the Flores-Romang sector of the arc of the Kutai basin is related to the rifting of the eastern mar-
(e.g., localities in Rinca Island, West Flores, and south Ro- gin of Sundaland and the drifting of western Sulawesi away
mang). At Wetar, Au-Ag barite deposits (23 t Au) represent a from Kalimantan in the middle Tertiary. Chambers and Daley
submarine exhalative system in a sea-floor caldera setting (1997) indicated initial rift-basin formation in the Eocene and
similar to the Kuroko deposits in Japan (Sewell and Wheatley, subsequent basin development by load subsidence to Recent
1994). Gold-silver mineralization occurs in stratiform barite time. It is now clear that the separation of western Sulawesi
sand units (exhalite), which are underlain by copper-rich mas- and Kalimantan by rifting began in the Eocene, although it is
sive pyrite-marcasite zones and quartz-pyrite stockworks still uncertain if there was ocean crust formation in the

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Makassar Strait (Cloke et al., 1999). Plio-Pleistocene tholei- and intermediate-sulfidation vein systems that have under-
itic plateau flood-basalts form platforms in northwestern, gone supergene enrichment during weathering. A colloidal
north-central, and northeastern Kalimantan. origin for the gold recovered from the Ampalit alluvial mine
Mineral deposit styles: A well-defined northeasterly trend- in Central Kalimantan has been inferred by Seeley and
ing belt of gold deposits and prospects extends approximately Senden (1994), on the basis of gold grain morphology and its
500 km along the southeastern margin of the Oligocene to fineness of 998. The delicate nature of the grain boundaries
Miocene arc (Fig. 14). This central Kalimantan gold belt co- and the high fineness preclude mechanical transport from
incides with the margins of the Kutei and Barito basins along nearby epithermal veins, which commonly contain electrum
the eastern flanks of the Schwanner massif and the rifted (purity of <900 fine).
margin of Sundaland. Andesitic volcanic rock-hosted, inter-
mediate-sulfidation vein and stockwork mineral deposits Other Indonesian, Borneo, and Papua New Guinean arcs
occur along this belt. The styles of mineralization in these sys- Several other late Cenozoic magmatic arcs are described by
tems are discussed by Simmons and Browne (1990) for Mt. Carlile and Mitchell (1994), including the Miocene Northwest
Muro, by Wake (1991) for Muyup, by Thompson et al. (1994) Borneo (Sarawak), the Neogene West Sulawesi, and Miocene
for Masupa Ria, and van Leeuwen (1994) for Mirah and the Moon-Utawa arcs (Fig. 14). Although there is igneous activity
others. The Mt. Muro vein complex is the largest of these de- in these regions, there are reasons to doubt that these arcs
posits (51 t Au). The complex lies close to the northwest- formed in subduction-related settings. The Miocene igneous
trending Trans Borneo shear of Hutchison (1989) and con- rocks of Sarawak are too poorly known and dated to be confi-
sists of more than 15 vein systems, most of which strike dent of their origins. Recent work (Prouteau et al., 2001) sug-
northwesterly and dip steeply. At Masupa Ria, intermediate- gests there are two suites: early Miocene arc volcanic rocks are
sulfidation veins are superimposed on an early-stage high-sul- the product of south-directed subduction north of Borneo and
fidation alteration system (Thompson et al., 1994). could be the equivalent of Paleogene rocks in Sabah (Hall and
The Kelian intermediate-sulfidation deposit (179 t Au, van Wilson, 2000; Hutchison et al., 2001), whereas middle and late
Leeuwen et al., 1990) is localized in a maar-diatreme com- Miocene magmatic rocks are postcollisional and have some
plex, which contains multiple diatreme breccia pipes and late- adakitic features (Prouteau et al., 2001).
stage endogenous quartz-porphyry domes (Davies et al., Neogene volcanic activity in western Sulawesi began at
1999). The diatreme complex postdates subvolcanic andesite about 11 Ma and was probably not related to active subduc-
intrusions and a north-northeasttrending Eocene to Oligocene tion but rather to extension (Yuwono et al., 1988; Priadi et al.,
rhyolitic volcano-sedimentary sequence. The ore is hosted by 1994; Polv et al., 1997). Elburg and Foden (1998) described
a variety of breccia styles, which have undergone extensive the rocks as syncollisional and isotopically enriched and rela-
hydrothermal alteration. Styles of mineralization include net- tively K rich, which they attribute to a contribution of sub-
work veins and breccia and fracture filling by complex car- ducted sediments. Neogene magmatic rocks are commonly
bonate-quartz-pyrite-sphalerite-galena-gold/electrum. Limited high K and include shoshonites and leucitites. The trace ele-
K/Ar radiometric dating at Kelian indicates an early Miocene ment patterns in the lavas suggest subduction zone recycling,
age for andesite intrusion (23 Ma) and sericite alteration (20 but they are most similar to rocks of postsubduction exten-
Ma; van Leeuwen et al., 1990). The deposit lies adjacent to sional environments, such as those of the southwetern United
the Kutei basin and along the rifted margin of Sundaland. States (Macpherson and Hall, 2002).
Disseminated sedimentary rock-hosted gold deposits occur There was little volcanism in western New Guinea during
in the Bau district of western Sarawak (~40 t Au in past pro- the Neogene and no evidence of significant subduction. Seis-
duction, Wilford, 1955; Wolfenden, 1965). Gold is associated mically, there is a poorly defined slab beneath western New
with carbonate and siliciclastic members of the Jurassic Bau Guinea, which suggests a south-dipping subducted slab of lit-
Limestone in fault contact with the overlying Cretaceous tle more than 100 km at the New Guinea trench. Tomo-
Pedawan Shale. Pervasive silicification and extensive collapse graphic images show no slab beneath western New Guinea
breccias have developed close to the shale and/or limestone (Spakman and Bijwaard, 1998; Hall and Spakman, 2002). As
contact along the Tai Parit fault and adjacent to argillic-al- noted by Carlile and Mitchell (1994), Neogene volcanic rocks
tered dacite porphyry dikes. Tai Parit marks the general in- from Irian Jaya have been little explored and the mid-
tersection between a north-northeastoriented belt of middle Miocene Moon-Utawa rocks have not been well studied.
Miocene (1310 Ma; Metal Mining Agency of Japan, 1985) Other Miocene volcanic rocks in Irian Jaya have an unusual
dacite to granodiorite intrusions with the northeast-trending chemical character that is postcollisional and quite different
Bau anticline. Disseminated gold mineralization is associated from Neogene magmatic rocks in eastern New Guinea
with arsenopyrite in silicified shale at Jugan, approximately 10 (Housh and McMahon 2000).
km along trend, to the northeast. These sedimentary rock- Carlile and Mitchell (1994) postulated the existence of the
hosted deposits form part of a >300 km2 district, which also Neogene Aceh arc in northernmost Sumatra, on the basis of
includes weak porphyry copper-style mineralization and pre- the distribution of volcanic rocks of similar age and the cita-
viously mined Cu-Au skarns, auriferous mesothermal and ep- tion of an offshore trench in Stephenson et al. (1982). How-
ithermal polymetallic sulfide-veins, and disseminated mer- ever, this arc, if it exists at all, lacks a Benioff zone and a pro-
cury deposits (Schuh, 1993) nounced bathymetric trench, as indicated by satellite gravity
Historic and recent alluvial gold mines are common in data. It is more likely that the Aceh arc represents a young
western and central Kalimantan. The placer gold is probably portion of the Sunda arc with magmatic activity localized
sourced from orogenic quartz lodes in crystalline basement along a west-northwesttrending arc-transverse fault zone.

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Miocene to Pliocene calc-alkaline and alkaline volcanic ore assemblages at the Busi and Boniavat vein systems, which
rocks and granodiorite to monzonite intrusions (Dondo Suite) are more quartz rich and typically contain only minor base
in the western arm and neck of Sulawesi do not host signifi- metal sulfides (Russell, 1990). The age of mineralization at
cant gold mineralization. However, significant gold deposits Busai is dated as 12.3 Ma (Russell and Finlayson, 1987).
do occur at Awak Mas (26 t Au) and Palu (G. Hartshorn, pers.
commun., 1999). Both deposits are located close to sinistral Burman
strike-slip faults of the Palu fault system. In Awak Mas, epi- to Geologic setting: The Neogene to Quaternary Burman
mesothermal quartz veins and stockworks are localized along magmatic arc includes an onshore portion in Myanmar, which
shear zones in Cretaceous metasedimentary basement and extends ~1,200 km from the Jade mines in the north through
near fault contacts with basalt (van Leeuwen, 1994). Gold oc- Mount Popa and Pegu Yoma in the south, and an offshore
curs in pyritic quartz-albite-carbonate breccias, veins, and chain of islands and seamounts in the Narcandam and Barren
stockworks. The Ag/Au ratio of the deposit is less than one. Island region of the Andaman Sea (Fig. 2; Table 1). The arc
The genetic relationship between mineralization and the lies to the west of the dextral strike-slip Sagaing fault, which
Neogene magmatic arc, if any, is not clear. marks the boundary between the Burma continental block to
No significant gold prospects are known in the Northwest the west and the Shan-Thai core of the Eurasian plate to the
Borneo arc of Hutchison (1989). However, gold occurs in east (Hutchison, 1989). The onshore portion of the arc is calc-
placers and minor quartz veins near dacitic pyroclastic rocks alkaline to high K calc-alkaline, while the offshore sector is
and flows of the Hose Mountains and the Usun Apau plateau tholeiitic (Hutchison, 1989). A belt of alkaline to shoshonitic
(Kirk, 1968; Geological Survey of Malaysia, 1976). rocks, about 100 km to the east of the calc-alkaline arc, ex-
The Miocene andesitic volcanic rocks and dioritic intru- tends along the eastern side of the Sagaing fault and contin-
sions in the Birds Head portion of the Moon arc in Irian ues southward along the eastern shore of the Andaman Sea.
Jaya are characterized by gold and base metal mineralization The eastward increase in alkalinity is attributed to the waning
associated with quartz veins and stockworks (Carlile and stages of eastward subduction of the Indian plate beneath the
Mitchell, 1994). No significant gold or copper prospects are Burma block during the transition to strike-slip movement as-
documented for the Oligocene to Miocene volcanic arc rocks sociated with spreading in the Andaman Sea that began by
on Yapen Island, east of the Moon arc. ~10 Ma (Curray et al., 1979; Stephenson and Marshall, 1984).
The Mount Kinabalu pluton, satellite intrusions, and coeval The Burman magmatic arc is associated with a poorly defined
andesitic-dacitic volcanic rocks in northwestern Sabah do not Benioff zone that extends to a depth of 200 km.
lie along a well-defined magmatic arc. The ages of the causal The basement to the arc in the Banmauk region consists of
high K calc-alkaline adamellite pluton and apophyses range Mesozoic phyllite, schist, gneiss, and amphibolite. Marine
from 12.2 to 1.3 Ma (Kirk, 1968; Hutchison, 1989). However, basalt, andesite, volcaniclastic rocks, and mudstone overlie
the most probable age ranges from 7.0 to 6.4 Ma (App. 4; Bel- the basement rocks and both sequences are intruded by the
lon and Rangin, 1991; Imai, 2000). The pluton intrudes Pale- Cretaceous Kanzachaung granodiorite batholith (United Na-
ogene sedimentary rocks of the Rajang accretionary prism to tions Development Program, 1978a). Eocene andesite sills
the inactive Northwest Borneo trench (Hutchison, 1989). A and early Oligocene diorite to granodiorite stocks (e.g.,
series of northwest-trending faults pass through Mount Kina- Shangalon granodiorite), trachyte flows and dikes are overlain
balu, forming a fault zone that extends through central Sabah by Oligocene to Miocene mudstones and sandstones (United
to the Semporna peninsula (Kinabalu fault of Tokuyama and Nations Development Program, 1978a, b; Mitchell et al.,
Yoshida, 1974). Basement rocks consist of greenschist- and 1999). This succession covers much of the western forearc
amhibolite-facies schist and gneiss of Mesozoic (?) age. and eastern backarc basins to the Burman arc. Late Miocene
The Mamut Cu-Au deposit is centered on an apophysis to to Quaternary basalt and andesite are characteristic of the
the Kinabalu pluton along the eastern flank of Mount Kina- Mount Popa, Taungthonlon, and Monywa areas.
balu. Porphyry-style mineralization occurs in and adjacent to Mineral deposit styles: Alluvial gold occurs at Mansi, to the
an adamellite porphyry stock (7.0 Ma; Imai, 2000) cut by west of the northern portion of the arc, and in the Jade Mines
postmineralization granodiorite dikes in a sequence of weakly region to the north (Goosens, 1978; United Nations Develop-
hornfelzed sandstone, mudstone, spillitc tuffs, and serpen- ment Program, 1978c). In the Banmauk region lode gold was
tinized peridotite. The host-rock sequence is inferred to have recovered from pyritic quartz lodes hosted by Tertiary an-
been tectonically emplaced in the early to middle Miocene desitic tuffs and breccias at Kyaukpazat (Goosens, 1978) and
(Kosaka and Wakita, 1978). in granodiorite at Sadwin (United Nations Development Pro-
Woodlark Island in Papua New Guinea is a remnant of a gram, 1978c). The Shangalon porphyry Cu-Au prospect is
Miocene island arc built upon Cretaceous (?)-Eocene tholei- hosted by quartz diorite along the margin of the Cretaceous
itic, Solomon Sea floor basalt, which is inferred to have been granodiorite batholith, 80 km southwest of Banmauk.
obducted onto the Australian craton (Fig. 15; Russell and Fin- The Monywa high-sulfidation deposit occurs in an uplifted
layson, 1987; Russell, 1990). Intermediate-sulfidation gold de- portion of the arc about 50 km north of Mount Popa. More
posits, Kulumadau, Boniavat, and Busai, are related to a por- than 4.5 Mt of copper occurs in hypogene chalcocite-bearing
phyritic microdioritic pluton and monzonite dikes emplaced in breccia bodies associated with hypabyssal dacitic intrusions,
high K calc-alkaline andesitic volcanic and volcaniclastic rocks which indicate radiometric ages of 19 Ma at Letpadaung and
of early to middle Miocene age (Russell, 1990). The ore as- 13 Ma at Kyisintaung (App. 6; Kyaw Win and Kirwin, 1998).
semblage at Kulumadau contains calcite quartz-pyrite-base The gold content of the copper ore is minor. The intermedi-
metal sulfides in phreatic explosion breccias, in contrast to the ate-sulfidation quartz veins that occur within 5 km of the

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chalcocite orebodies contain low levels of gold and silver APPENDICES 2 to 6


(Kyaw Win and Kirwin, 1998).
In the Indawgyi region of the backarc basin, immediately Grade-Tonnage and Age Characteristics for Major Gold
west of the Sagaing fault, Miocene (?) sedimentary rock- and Copper Gold Deposits in the Cenozoic Magmatic
hosted gold mineralization at Kyaukpahto is localized in a de- Arcs of Southeast Asia and the West Pacific
calcified and silicified calcareous arkosic sandstone sequence In these appendices, the total size and contained gold and
(Male Formation) of probable Eocene age (Ye Myint Swe, copper contents (metric tonnes), grades (g/t Au and % Cu)
1990; Mitchell et al., 1999). Hydrothermal alteration includes and age of formation (Ma) are reported for all major and
decalcification, silicification, and sericitic and argillic styles. some minor deposits. These contents include conservative re-
Gold is associated with fine-grained pyrite and arsenopyrite in source figures for the deposits and combined reserves and/or
quartz veinlets and as disseminated framboidal grains in sili- resources and past production for the mines, except where in-
cified and brecciated sandstone. The region hosts numerous dicated otherwise. The grade-tonnage characteristics and age
primary and alluvial gold occurrences that are spatially re- relationships are illustrated in Figures 17 and 18 in the
lated to a 100-km-long segment of the Sagaing fault. printed part of the paper.

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18
Appendix 2
Grade-Tonnage and Age Charactersitics of Significant Gold and Copper Deposits in Cenozoic Magmatic Arcs of Japan and Taiwan

Magmatic Region/district Metric tonnes Cu Au Contained Contained Reference for Age (Ma)
Deposit Style arc (million t) (%) (g/t) Cu (000s t) Au (t) Grade-tonnage data (method) Reference for age

Konomai LS Kuril Northeast Hokkaido 11.4 6.4 73 Watanabe (1995) 12.9-12.2 (K/Ar) Yahata et al. (1999)
Sanru LS Kuril Northeast Hokkaido 0.9 7.4 7 Watanabe (1995) 12.4 (K/Ar) Sugaki and Isobe (1985)
Kitano-o LS Kuril Northeast Hokkaido 0.5 5.9 3 Shikazono (1986); 7.7-7.4 (K/Ar) Maeda (1996)
Saito et al. (1967)
Hokuryu LS Kuril Northeast Hokkaido 0.3 8.2 2 Shikazono (1986); 13.7 (K/Ar) Yahata et al. (1999)

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Saito et al. (1967)
Ohgane IS NE Japan Southwest Hokkaido 0.4 5 2 Shikazono (1986); 11.4 (K/Ar) Hirai et al. (2000)
Saito et al. (1967)
Toyoha EP-XE-PM NE Japan Southwest Hokkaido 20 0.35 7 Kanbara and Kumita (1990) 2.9-0.5 (K/Ar) Sawai et al. (1989)
Osarizawa EP-PM NE Japan Tohoku 28.5 1.05 0.15 300 4 Mineland Osarizawa
(unpub. data) Miocene
Hosokura EP-PM NE Japan Tohoku 3 Shikazono (1986) 5.8 (K/Ar) Shikazono and
Tsunakawa (1982)
Teine HS-IS NE Japan SW Hokkaido 1.4 7.5 11 Shikazono (1986); 4.4-4.0 (K/Ar) Sawai et al. (1992;
Saito et al. (1967) Sawai and Itaya (1996)
Sado IS NE Japan Tohoku 15 5.1 77 Sakai and Oba (1970) 24.1-22.1 (K/Ar) Ministry of Interna-
14.5-13.4 (K/Ar) tional Trade and Indus-
try (1987a), Shikazono
and Tsunakawa (1982)
Takatama IS NE Japan Tohoku 2.9 10 29 Japan Mining Industry
Association (1978) 7.7 (K/Ar) Seki (1993)
Chitose IS NE Japan Southwest Hokkaido 1.6 14.5 23 Japan Mining Industry 3.5-3.3 (K/Ar) Sawai et al. (1992)

18
Association (1978)
Shizukari IS NE Japan Southwest Hokkaido 1.1 7 8 Saito et al. (1967); 2.4 (K/Ar) Watanabe (1991)
Shikazono (1986)
Todoroki IS NE Japan Southwest Hokkaido 6 Shikazono (1986) 3.1-2.1 (K/Ar) Sawai et al. (1992)
Koryu IS NE Japan Southwest Hokkaido 1.2 (K/Ar) Shimizu et al. (1998)
Nurukawa VMS NE Japan Tohoku 1.0 6.8 7 Yamada et al. (1988) Middle Miocene Yamada et al. (1988)
Hanaoka VMS NE Japan Tohoku 41.8 2.3 0.1-0.2 960 Ohmoto et al. (1983) Middle Miocene Ohmoto et al. (1983)
Kosaka VMS NE Japan Tohoku 27.9 0.4-0.7 600 Ohmoto et al. (1983) Middle Miocene Ohmoto et al. (1983)
Shakanai VMS NE Japan Tohoku 8.7 0.3-2.0 100 Ohmoto et al. (1983) Middle Miocene Ohmoto et al. (1983)
Yoichi VMS NE Japan Southwest Hokkaido 9 Past production only; 12.3 (K/Ar) Sawai and Itaya (1996)
Watanabe (2002)
Ashio XE-PM NE Japan Tohoku 24.9 2.5 0.12 615 3 Shikazono (1986); Furukawa Miocene
Mining Co. Ltd. (1981)
Bajo IS SW Japan North Kyushu 13 Izawa and Watanabe (2001) 4.6-3.9 (K/Ar) Sawai et al. (2002)
Ohmori IS SW Japan Chugoku 1 Shikazono (1986) 1.1 (K/Ar) Sakota et al. (2000)
Taio LS SW Japan North Kyushu 5.7 6.3 36 Japan Mining Industry 3.6-2.9 (K/Ar) Yuan et al. (1993)
Association (1978)
Hoshino LS SW Japan North Kyushu 3 Izawa and Watanabe (2001) 2.8-2.5 (K/Ar) Sawai et al. (1998)
and (2001)
Seigoshi IS Izu-Bonin Izu 1.3 10.8 14 Japan Mining Industry 1.8-0.7 (K/Ar) Hamasaki and Bunno
Association (1978) (2002); Ministry of
Internatinal Trade and
Industry (1987b)
Rendaiji IS Izu-Bonin Izu 0.6 4.0 3 Japan Mining Industry 1.5 (K/Ar) Ministry of Internatinal
Association (1978) Trade and Industry
(1987b)
Toi LS Izu-Bonin Izu 1.3 9.3 12 Japan Mining Industry Plio-Pleistocene
Association (1978)
Appendix 2 (Cont.)

Magmatic Region/district Metric tonnes Cu Au Contained Contained Reference for Age (Ma)
Deposit Style arc (million t) (%) (g/t) Cu (000s t) Au (t) Grade-tonnage data (method) Reference for age

Mochikoshi LS Izu-Bonin Izu 0.8 6.4 5 Japan Mining Industry Pio-Pleistocene Ministry of Internati0nal
Association (1978) Trade and Industry
(1987b)
Yugashima LS Izu-Bonin Izu 0.2 12.2 2 Japan Mining Industry 2.5 (K/Ar) Ministry of International
Association (1978) Trade and Industry
(1987b)

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Chinkuashih HS Ryukyu Taiwan 20 0.6 4.6 119 92 Tan (1991); 1.0 (Ar/Ar, K/Ar) Wang et al. (1999)
(Taiwan) Wang et al. (1999)
Kasuga HS Ryukyu South Kyushu 3 3.1 9 Hayashi (2001) 4.5 (K/Ar) Ministry of Interna-
tional Trade and
Industry (1985)
Akeshi HS Ryukyu South Kyushu 0.9 9.8 9 Hayashi (2001); 3.7 (K/Ar) Izawa et al. (1984)
Nakamura et al. (1994)
Iwato HS Ryukyu South Kyushu 8 Hayashi (2001) 4.7-4.2 (K/Ar) Izawa et al. (1984);
Togashi and Shibata
(1984)
Kushikino IS Ryukyu South Kyushu 8.3 6.7 56 Japan Mining Industry 3.7-3.4 (K/Ar) Izawa and Zeng (2001)
Association (1978)
Fuke IS Ryukyu South Kyushu 3 Izawa and Watanabe (2001) 2.2-1.4 (K/Ar) Ministry of Interna-
tional Trade and
Industry (2000)
Hishikari LS Ryukyu South Kyushu 5.5 47.3 260 Izawa et al. (2001) 1.1-0.7 (K/Ar) Sekine et al. (2002)
Yamagano LS Ryukyu South Kyushu 1.6 17.4 28 Murakami and 2.0-1.9 (K/Ar) Murakami and
Feebrey (2001) Feebrey (2001)

19
Okuchi LS Ryukyu South Kyushu 1.6 13.6 22 Japan Mining Industry 1.6-1.2 (K/Ar) Ministry of Interna-
Association (1978) tional Trade and
Industry (2000)

Notes: Grade-tonnage data includes combined resources and past production; mineralization styles: HS = high-sulfidation epithermal, IS = intermediate-sulfidation epithermal, LS = low-sulfidation
epithermal, PM = polymetallic, VMS = Kuroko-type massive sulfide, XE = xenothermal
19
20
Appendix 3
Grade-Tonnage and Age Charactersitics of Significant Gold and Copper Deposits in Cenozoic Magmatic Arcs of the Philippines

Magmatic Metric tonnes Cu Au Contained Contained Reference for


Deposit1 Style3 arc Region/district (million t) (%) (g/t) Cu (000s t) Au (t) grade-tonnage data Age (Ma) Reference for age

Far South East PO CGD Luzon Central Mankayan 650 0.65 1.33 4225 865 Claveria et al. (1999) 1.4-1.3 (K/Ar) Hedenquist et al. (2001)
Cordilerra
Sto Thomas II* PO CGD Luzon Central Baguio 449 0.38 0.7 1616 314 Singer et al. (2002) 1.5 (K/Ar) Sillitoe (1989)
Cordillera
Guinaoang PO CGD Luzon Central Mankayan 326 0.37 0.37 1206 121 Mining Journal 3.5 (K/Ar) Sillitoe and

0361-0128/98/000/000-00 $6.00
Cordillera (14 Oct. 1994) Angeles (1985)
San Fabian PO CGD Luzon Central San Fabian 314 0.27 0.21 848 66 Research Information 20.6 Singer et al. (2002)
Cordillera Unit (2002)
Santo Nino* PO CGD Luzon Central Baguio 286 0.35 0.2 1001 57 Singer et al. (2002) 1.5 (K/Ar) Singer et al. (2002)
Cordillera
Lobo* PO CGD Luzon Central Baguio 210 0.28 0.25 588 53 Sillitoe and Gappe(1984)
Cordillera
Batong Buhay* PO CGD Luzon Central Northwest Luzon 107 0.6 0.25 642 27 TVI Pacific Inc. (1995) 7 Singer et al. (2002)
Cordillera
Tawi-Tawi PO CGD Luzon Central Bobok 159 0.39 0.16 620 25 Metal Mining Agency 4.6(K/Ar) Singer et al. (2002)
Cordillera of Japan (1977)
Black PO CGD Luzon Central Baguio 62 0.38 0.33 236 20 Sillitoe and Gappe 3.1-2.9 (Ar/Ar) Waters (2004)
Mountain* Cordillera (1984)
Kenon South PO CGD Luzon Central Baguio 62 0.38 0.33 236 20 Singer et al. (2002) 7 Singer et al. (2002)
Cordillera
Gambang PO CGD Luzon Central Mankayan 55.6 0.35 0.32 195 18 Yumul (1980)
Cordillera
Suluakan PO CGD Luzon Central Baguio 123 0.35 0.13 431 16 Sillitoe and Gappe (1984)

20
(Worldwide) Cordillera
Botilao PO CGD Luzon Central Northwest Luzon 82 0.52 0.19 426 16 Sillitoe and Gappe (1984)
Cordillera
Ullman* PO CGD Luzon Central Baguio 38 0.34 0.33 129 13 Sillitoe and Gappe (1984)
Cordillera
Dilong/Hale PO CGD Luzon Central Northwest Luzon 35 0.5 0.35 175 12 Sillitoe and Gappe (1984)
Cordillera
Thanksgiving* SK Luzon Central Baguio 1.1 11.6 13 Mitchell and 5.5 (K/Ar) Sillitoe (1989)
Cordillera Leach (1991)
Lepanto* HS Luzon Central Mankayan 40.7 2.78 3.29 1131 134 Claveria et al. (1999) 1.4-1.3 (K/Ar) Hedenquist et al. (2001)
Cordillera
Antamok* IS Luzon Central Baguio 315 B. Andam (pers.
Cordillera commun., 1996); Benquet
Corp., (1994) (estimate)
Itogon* IS Luzon Central Baguio 31.1 3.92 122 Itogon-Suyoc Mining Pleistocene(?) Inferred from
Cordillera Incorporated (1993, Cooke et al. (1996)
1994) (estimate)
Acupan* IS Luzon Central Baguio 97 Bureau of Mines and 0.65 (K/Ar) Cooke et al. (1996)
Cordillera Geo-Sciences (1986);
Benquet Corp. (1995)
(estimate)
Victoria* IS Luzon Central Mankayan 11 7.3 80 Claveria et al. (1999) 1.15 (K/Ar) Hedenquist et al. (2001)
Cordillera
Teresa2 IS Luzon Central Mankayan 7.3 5.3 39 Waters (2004) 1.15 (?) Inferred: Hedenquist
Cordillera et al. (2001)
Batong Buhay* IS Luzon Central Northwest Luzon 1 13.0 13 TVI Pacific Inc.(1995)
Cordillera
Dizon* PO CGD Western Luzon Zambales 187 0.36 0.93 706 182 Singer et al. (2002) 2.7 (K/Ar) Sillitoe (1989)
Tayson PO CGD Western Luzon Batangas 336 0.31 0.35 1042 118 Singer et al. (2002) 20.5 Singer et al. (2002)
San Antonio PO CGD Western Luzon Marinduque 195 0.57 0.1 1112 20 Sillitoe and Gappe (1984)
Appendix 3 (Cont.)

Magmatic Metric tonnes Cu Au Contained Contained Reference for


Deposit1 Style3 arc Region/district (million t) (%) (g/t) Cu (000s t) Au (t) grade-tonnage data Age (Ma) Reference for age

Pisumpan PO CGD Western Luzon Zambales 20 0.41 0.6 82 12 Sillitoe and Gappe (1984) 2.1 (K/Ar) Singer et al. (2002)
Tapian* PO CGD Sierra Madre Marinduque 177 0.52 0.12 920 21 Sillitoe and Gappe (1984) 15 (K/Ar) Walther et al. (1981)
Dinkidi PO CGD Cordon Isabela-Didipio 124 0.4 1.0 484 120 Singer et al. (2002) 23.2 (K/Ar) Wolfe et al. (1999)
Marian PO CGD Cordon Isabela-Didipio 55 0.43 0.24 237 13 Singer et al. (2002) 25 (K/Ar) Mitchell and Leach (1991)
Runruno IS Cordon Isabela-Didipio 27 1.04 28 Research Information
Unit (2002)

0361-0128/98/000/000-00 $6.00
Kingking PO CGD Philippines Camarines Norte 400 0.35 0.6 1447 167 Singer et al. (2002) Pliocene Sillitoe (1989)
Boyongun PO CGD Philippines Surigao 250 0.6 0.6 1500 150 Feebrey (2003) 2.6-2.3 (Ar/Ar) Waters (2004)
Bayugo PO CGD Philippines Surigao 2.6-2.3 (Ar/Ar) Waters (2004)
Amacan * PO CGD Philippines Masara 116 0.37 0.40 429 46 Sillitoe and Gappe (1984) Late Miocene Mitchell and Leach (1991)
Mapula PO CGD Philippines Masara 78 0.4 0.36 312 28 Sillitoe and Gappe (1984) Late Miocene Mitchell and Leach (1991)
Larap
(Matanlang) PO CGM Philippines Camarines Norte 65 0.35 0.4 228 26 Sillitoe and Gappe (1984) 20.5 Singer et al. (2002)
Nalesbitan * HS Philippines Camarines Norte 7.6 1.23 9 United Nations Devel- Pliocene Sillitoe et al. (1990)
opment Program (1992)
Placer* IS Philippines Surigao 39.9 1.63 65 Manila Mining Corp- Pliocene Sillitoe (1989)
oration (1993, 1994);
Mitchell and Leach
(1991) (estimate)
Longos Point* IS Philippines Camarines Norte 3.2 12.0 38 United Nations Devel-
opment Program (1992)
Masara* IS Philippines Masara 3.9 8.65 34 Mitchell and Leach 4.3 (K/Ar) Sillitoe (1989)
(1991); White et al.
(1995)
Co-o * IS Philippines Central East United Nations Devel-

21
Mindanao 0.9 7.3 7 opment Program (1992)
Siana* DS/IS Philippines Surigao 4.8 5.42 26 Bureau of Mines and 2.6-2.3 (Ar/Ar) Waters (2004)
Geo-Sciences (1986);
Mitchell and Leach
(1991) (estimate)
Sulat VMS Philippines Central Samar 32.5 0.61 0.62 198 20 Bureau of Mines and Miocene Mitchell and Leach (1991)
Geo-Sciences (1986)
Rapu-Rapu VMS Philippines Rapu-Rapu 7.1 1.23 2.54 87 18 TVI-Pacific (2003b)
Basay* PO CGD Masbate-Negros Negros 262 0.44 0.29 1153 76 Singer et al. (2002) ?30 (K/Ar) Divis (1983)
Hinobaan POCGD Masbate-Negros Negros 440 0.41 0.14 1804 62 Singer et al. (2002) 17.5 Singer et al. (2002)
Sipalay* POCGD Masbate-Negros Negros 807 0.47 0.05 3793 40 Singer et al. (2002) ?30 (K/Ar) Divis (1983)
Masbate* IS Masbate-Negros Masbate 14.5 4.25 62 Mitchell and Leach Late Miocene Mitchell and Leach (1991)
(1991) (estimate)
Bulawan* IS Masbate-Negros Negros 14 2.9 41 Metals Economics 14.4 (K/Ar) Sillitoe (1989)
Group (1994)
Sibutad IS Sulu-Zamboanga Zamboanga 21 1.12 24 Jimenez et al. (2002) Pleistocene Jimenez et al. (2002)
Canatuan VMS Sulu-Zamboanga Zamboanga 2.3 1.85 2.23 43 5 TVI-Pacific (2003a)
Tampakan PO CGD Cotabato Cotabato 900 0.75 0.3 6750 270 Rohrlach et al. (1999) 3.2 (U/Pb) R. Loucks, pers. commun.
(2002)
T'Boli IS Cotabato Cotabato 2.4 5.5 13 Research Institute
Unit (2002)
Lutopan* PO CGM Cebu Cebu 533 0.5 0.31 2665 165 Sillitoe and Gappe (1984) 108 (K/Ar) Walther et al. (1981)
Biga * PO CGM Cebu Cebu 395 0.43 0.25 1699 99 Sillitoe and Gappe (1984)
Carmen* PO CGM Cebu Cebu 390 0.43 0.24 1677 94 Sillitoe and Gappe (1984)

Notes: Grade-tonnage data includes combined resources and past production


1 Present or historic mines are indicated by *
2 The Teresa gold reserve figure is not included in the endowment estimates quoted in the text or figures.
3 Mineralization styles: DS = disseminated sedimentary rock-hosted, HS = high-sulfidation epithermal, IS = intermediate-sulfidation epithermal, LS = low-sulfidation epithermal, PO CGD = por-

phyry copper-gold, PO CGM = porphyry copper-gold-molybdenum, SK = skarn, VMS = volcanic-associated massive sulfide
21
22
Appendix 4
Grade-Tonnage and Age Charactersitics of Significant Gold and Copper Deposits in Cenozoic Magmatic Arcs of Indonesia and Borneo

Magmatic Metric tonnes Cu Au Contained Contained Reference for


Deposit1 Style3 arc Region/district (million t) (%) (g/t) Cu (000s t) Au (t) grade-tonnage data Age (Ma) Reference for age

Bawone HS Sangihe Sangihe 4.5 1.37 6 van Leeuwen (1994) Miocene Carlile et al. (1990)
(Binebase)
Cabang Kiri East PO CGD North Sulawesi Gorontalo 136 0.43 0.58 585 79 van Leeuwen (1994) 2.9 (K/Ar) Perello (1994)
Sungai Mak PO CGD North Sulawesi Gorontalo 84 0.76 0.39 638 33 van Leeuwen (1994) Late Pliocene Perello (1994)
Kayubulan Ridge PO CGD North Sulawesi Gorontalo 75 0.76 0.33 570 25 van Leeuwen (1994) 2.4 (K/Ar) Perello (1994)

0361-0128/98/000/000-00 $6.00
Bulagidun PO CGD North Sulawesi Marissa 14.4 0.61 0.68 88 10 van Leeuwen (1994) 8.8 (K/Ar) Lubis et al. (1994)
Tapadaa PO CGD North Sulawesi Gorontalo 43 0.54 0.08 232 3 van Leeuwen (1994) 3.75 (K/Ar) Singer et al. (2002)
Motomboto HS North Sulawesi Gorontalo 2 2.0 1.5 40 3 van Leeuwen (1994) 1.9 (K/Ar) Perello (1994)
(approximate)
Gn. Pani IS North Sulawesi Marissa 30 1.35 41 van Leeuwen (1994); 3.3-3.1 (Ar/Ar) Pearson and Caira (1999)
Carlile and Mitchell (1994)
Toka Tindung IS North Sulawesi Kotamobagu 12.3 2.85 35 Gold Gazette Asian 2.4 (K/Ar) Moyle et al (1997)
Edition (April 1999)
Doup IS North Sulawesi Kotamobagu 12 1.6 19 van Leeuwen (1994) Neogene White et al. (1995)
Lanut* IS North Sulawesi Kotamobagu 5.5 2.80 15 Research Information Neogene Carlile et al. (1990)
Unit (2002)
Bolangitang IS North Sulawesi Gorontalo -- 11 Carlile and Mitchell
(1994) (estimate only)
Mesel Deposits* DS North Sulawesi Kotamobagu 9.7 6.45 63 Newmont Mining (1994) Late Miocene- Garwin et al. (1995)
Pliocene
Kaputusan PO CGD Halmahera Bacan 70 0.3 0.21 210 15 van Leeuwen (1994) Neogene Carlile and Mitchell
(1994)

22
Gosowong* IS Halmahera Gosowong 0.99 27 27 Olberg et al. (1999) 2.9-2.4 (Ar/Ar) Olberg et al. (1999)
Kencana2* IS Halmahera Gosowong 1.7 41 70 Mining News, 2004 Pliocene Olberg et al. (1999)
Toguraci* IS Halmahera Gosowong 0.41 27 11 Intierra (2003) Pliocene Olberg et al. (1999)
Grasberg* PO CGD Medial Carstenz 4000 0.6 0.64 24000 2560 van Leeuwen (1994) 3.3-2.7 (K/Ar) MacDonald and Arnold
(resource) New Guinea (1994); McDowell et al.
(1996)
Grasberg* PO CGD Medial Carstenz 1877 1.04 1.04 19521 1952 Widodo et al. (1999) 3.3-2.7 (K/Ar) MacDonald and Arnold
(reserve) New Guinea (open pit and (1994); McDowell et al.
underground) (1996)
Kucing Liar SK Medial Carstenz 320 1.41 1.41 4512 451 Widodo et al. (1999) ~3 Widodo et al. (1999)
New Guinea
Wabu SK Medial Carstenz 117 2.16 253 O'Connor et al. (1999) 6.6-5.2 (K/Ar) O'Conner et al. (1999)
New Guinea
Ertsberg East SK Medial Carstenz 210 1.14 0.9 2394 189 Coutts et al. (1999) 3.1-2.6 (K/Ar) Mertig et al. (1994);
(IOZ/DOZ)* New Guinea McDowell et al. (1996)
Big Gossan SK Medial Carstenz 37 2.69 1.02 995 38 Widodo et al. (1999) ~3 Mertig et al. (1994);
New Guinea McDowell et al. (1996)
Ertsberg* SK Medial Carstenz 32.6 2.3 0.8 750 26 Mertig et al. (1994) 3.1-2.6 (K/Ar) Mertig et al. (1994);
New Guinea McDowell et al. (1996)
DOM SK Medial Carstenz 31 1.67 0.42 518 13 Widodo et al. (1999) 3.1-2.6 (K/Ar) Mertig et al. (1994);
New Guinea McDowell et al. (1996)
Tangse PO CMD Sunda Tangse 600 0.15 900 van Leeuwen (1994) 13-9 van Leeuwen (1994)
Martabe HS Sunda Sibolga 66.7 1.74 116 Levet et al. (2003); Pliocene(?) B. K. Levet, pers.
Sutopo et al. (2003) commun. (2003)
Gn. Pongkor* IS Sunda West Java 6.0 17.1 103 Basuki et al. (1994); 8.5 (K/Ar) Marcoux and Milesi (1994)
van Leeuwen (1994)
Lebong Tandai* IS Sunda Bengkulu 2.8 15.5 43 van Leeuwen (1994) Miocene Jobson et al. (1994)
Lebong Donok* IS Sunda Bengkulu 2.9 14.3 41 van Leeuwen (1994)
Appendix 4 (Cont.)

Magmatic Metric tonnes Cu Au Contained Contained Reference for


Deposit1 Style3 arc Region/district (million t) (%) (g/t) Cu (000s t) Au (t) grade-tonnage data Age (Ma) Reference for age

Rawas* IS Sunda Bengkulu 7.8 3.1 24 Research Information


Unit (1997)
Cibaliung IS Sunda West Java 1.3 10.4 14 Research Information
Unit (2002)
Cikondang IS Sunda West Java 0.7 10.9 8 van Leeuwen (1994) Plio- Marcoux and Milesi (1994)
Pleistocene(?)

0361-0128/98/000/000-00 $6.00
Mangani* IS Sunda Mangani 0.9 6.5 6 van Leeuwen (1994)
Way Linggo IS Sunda Lampung 0.41 9.1 4 Research Information
Unit (2002)
Batu Hijau* PO CGD East Sunda West Sumbawa 1640 0.44 0.35 7216 574 Clode et al. (1999) 3.7 (U/Pb)4 Fletcher et al. (2000);
Garwin (2000, 2002a)
Elang PO CGD East Sunda West Sumbawa 600 0.35 0.4 2100 240 Maula and Levet (1996) 2.7 (U/Pb)4 Garwin (2000)
Soripesa IS Banda East Sumbawa 1 Carlile and Mitchell (1994)
Wetar Deposits* VMS-HS Banda Wetar 5.4 4.2 23 van Leeuwen (1994) 5-4; 4.7 Sewell and Wheatley
(1994); van Leeuwen
(1994)
Kelian* IS Central Central 97 1.85 179 van Leeuwen (1994) 20 (K/Ar) van Leeuwen et al. (1990)
Kalimantan Kalimantan
Mount Muro* IS Central Central 16.5 3.1 51 Research Information Early Simmons and Browne
Kalimantan Kalimantan Unit (1997) Miocene(?) (1990); Thompson et al.
(1994)
Mirah IS Central Central 6.0 1.96 12 Research Information
Kalimantan Kalimantan Unit (2002)
Masupa Ria IS Central Central 0.3 12.8 4 van Leeuwen (1994) 25 (K/Ar) Thompson et al. (1994)

23
Kalimantan Kalimantan
Bau Deposits DS Central Bau 7.3 4.3 31 Cox (1992) (estimate 13-10 (K/Ar) Metal Mining Agency of
(Sarawak)* Kalimantan includes Tai Parit and Japan (1985) (on felsic
Jugan) intrusions)
Mamut (Sabah)* PO CGD Kinabalu Pluton Mamut-Nungok 196 0.48 0.5 941 98 Singer et al. (2002) 7.0 (K/Ar); Imai (2000); Bellon and
6.8-6.4 (K/Ar) Rangin (1991)
Awak Mas IS Arc unrelated? Central Sulawesi 22 1.9 42 Research Information
Unit (2002)
Sungai Keruh IS Meratus- Meratus 4.3 1.8 8 van Leeuwen (1994)
Sumatra

Notes: Grade-tonnage data includes combined resources and past production, except for Grasberg, IOZ/DOZ, DOM, Big Gossan, Kucing Liar deposits, which include reserves as of December 1998
1 Present or historic mines are indicated by *
2 The Kencana resource figure is not included in the endowment estimates quoted in the text or figures
3 Mineralization styles: DS = disseminated sedimentary rock-hosted, HS = high-sulfidation epithermal, IS = intermediate-sulfidation epithermal, LS = low-sulfidation epithermal, PO CGD = por-

phyry copper-gold = PO CMD = porphyry copper-molybdenum, SK = skarn, VMS = volcanic-associated massive sulfide or exhalative
4 206Pb/238U ages of zircons using a sensitive high-mass resolution ion microprobe (SHRIMP II)
23
24
Appendix 5
Grade-Tonnage and Age Charactersitics of Significant Gold and Copper Deposits in Cenozoic Magmatic Arcs of Papua New Guinea

Magmatic Metric tonnes Cu Au Contained Contained Reference for Age (Ma)


Deposit1 Style2 arc or belt Region/district (million t) (%) (g/t) Cu (000s t) Au (t) grade-tonnage data (method) Reference for age

Ok Tedi* PO CGD, SK Medial Western Province 700 0.64 0.63 4480 441 Singer et al. (2002) 1.2-1.1 (K/Ar) Page (1976)
New Guinea
Star Mt.(Futik) PO CGD Medial Western Province 65 0.54 0.1 351 7 Singer et al. (2002) 1.6 (K/Ar) Arnold and Griffin
New Guinea (1978)
Mt. Bini PO CGD, IS Medial Central Province 85 0.4 0.6 340 51 Dugmore and 4.4 Dugmore and Leaman

0361-0128/98/000/000-00 $6.00
New Guinea Leaman (1998) (1998)
Porgera* ?IS, LS Medial Enga Province 84 5.8 487 Handley and 5.9 (Ar-Ar) Ronacher et al. (2002)
New Guinea Henry (1990)
Hidden Valley IS Medial Morobe Province 37 2.1 78 Nelson et al. (1990) 4.2 (K/Ar) Nelson et al. (1990)
New Guinea
Umuna / IS Medial Misima Island 56 1.38 77 Lewis and Wilson (1990) 3.5 (K/Ar) Appleby et al. (1996)
Misima* New Guinea
Kerimenge IS Medial Morobe Province 55 1.0 55 Hutton et al. (1990) 3.8-2.4 (K/Ar) Hutton et al. (1990);
New Guinea Page and McDougall
(1972)
Wau (Edie IS Medial Morobe Province 7.5 3.7 28 Carswell (1990) 3.8-2.4 (K/Ar) Carswell (1990); Page
Creek)* New Guinea and McDougall (1972)
Wapolu* IS Medial Fergusson Island 5.3 1.9 10 McNeil (1990) Pliocene McNeil (1990)
New Guinea
Gameta IS Medial Fergusson Island 2.3 2.3 5 Chapple and Ibil (1998) Pleistocene Chapple and Ibil (1998)
New Guinea
Hamata IS Medial Morobe Province 9.2 3.1 29 Denwer and 3.8-2.4 (K/Ar) Denwer and Mowat

24
New Guinea Mowat (1998) (1998); Page and
McDougall (1972)
Tolukuma* IS Medial Central Province 1.5 13.8 21 Semple et al. (1998) Pliocene Langmead and
New Guinea McLeod (1990)
Freida River PO CGD Maramuni West Sepik 1060 0.52 0.31 5512 329 Hall et al. (1990) 12 (K/Ar) Whalen et al. (1982)
Wafi River PO CGD Maramuni Morobe Province 100 1.3 0.6 1300 60 Tau-Loi and 14 (K/Ar) Tau-Loi and Andrew
Andrew (1998) (1998)
Yandera PO CGD Maramuni 338 0.42 0.1 1420 34 Watmuff (1978) 7 Singer et al. (2002)
Nena HS Maramuni West Sepik 69 1.63 0.81 1125 56 Bainbridge et al. (1998) 12 (K/Ar) Hall et al. (1990)
Wafi River HS Maramuni Morobe Province 18 2.6 47 Tau-Loi and 14 (K/Ar) Tau-Loi and Andrew
Andrew (1998) (1998)
Arie PO CGD Inner Melanesian Manus Island 165 0.32 528 Singer et al. (2002) 15 Singer et al. (2002)
Plesyumi PO CGD Inner Melanesian New Britain Island 25-24 (K/Ar) Titley (1978)
Esis PO CGD Inner Melanesian New Britain Island 25 (K/Ar) Hine et al. (1978)
Kulu PO CGD Inner Melanesian New Britain Island 22 (K/Ar) Hine and Mason (1978)
Wild Dog HS Inner Melanesian New Britain Island 0.96 5.83 6 Lindley (1990) 23-22 Lindley (1990)
(Mt. Sinivit)
Panguna* PO CGD Outer Melanesian Bougainville Island 1397 0.46 0.55 6426 768 Clark (1990) 3.4 (K/Ar) Clark (1990)
Ladolam* ?LS Outer Melanesian Lihir Island 420 3.28 1378 Lihir Gold (2003); 0.35-0.10 Moyle et al. (1990);
(Tabar-Feni arc) Research Information (K/Ar) Davies and Ballantyne
Unit (2002) (1987)
Kabang LS, PO CGD Outer Melanesian Ambitle island 4.0 1.4 6 Christopher (2002) <0.5 (K/Ar) Sillitoe (1989)
(Tabar-Feni arc)
Woodlark* IS Neogene island Woodlark Island 2.6 3.7 10 Russell (1990) 12.3 (K/Ar) Russell (1990); Russell
arc remnant and Finlayson (1987)

Notes: Grade-tonnage data includes combined resources and past production


1 Present or historic mines are indicated by *
2 Mineralization styles: HS = high-sulfidation epithermal, IS = intermediate-sulfidation epithermal, LS = low-sulfidation epithermal, PO CGD = porphyry copper-gold = SK, skarn
25

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Kyaw Win and

Kyaw Win and


Kirwin (1998)

Kirwin (1998)
Abiari, T.B., Samuel, K., and Sie, A., 1990, Mount Victor gold deposit,
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19 (K/Ar)

13 (K/Ar)
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central Japan: Modern Geology, v. 15, p. 315329.


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grade-tonnage data

Arnold, G.O., and Griffin, T.J., 1978, Intrusions and porphyry copper
Minproc (1985)

prospects of the Star Mountains, Papua New Guinea, in Gustafson, L.B.,


2 Mineralization styles: DS = disseminated sedimentary rock-hosted, HS = high-sulfidation epithermal, IS = intermediate-sulfidation epithermal
Reference for

and Titley, S.R., eds., Porphyry copper deposits of the southwestern Pacific
islands and Australia: ECONOMIC GEOLOGY, v. 73, p. 785795.
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Manila, Philippines.
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