Albert H Hofstra (Former Employee)
Science and Products
Filter Total Items: 82
Bald Mountain gold mining district, Nevada: A Jurassic reduced intrusion-related gold system Bald Mountain gold mining district, Nevada: A Jurassic reduced intrusion-related gold system
The Bald Mountain mining district has produced about 2 million ounces (Moz) of An. Geologic mapping, field relationships, geochemical data, petrographic observations, fluid inclusion characteristics, and Pb, S, O, and H isotope data indicate that An mineralization was associated with a reduced Jurassic intrusion. Gold deposits are localized within and surrounding a Jurassic (159 Ma)...
Authors
C.J. Nutt, A. H. Hofstra
Metallogeny of the Great Basin: Crustal evolution, fluid flow, and ore deposits Metallogeny of the Great Basin: Crustal evolution, fluid flow, and ore deposits
The Great Basin physiographic province in the Western United States contains a diverse assortment of world-class ore deposits. It currently (2006) is the world’s second leading producer of gold, contains large silver and base metal (Cu, Zn, Pb, Mo, W) deposits, a variety of other important metallic (Fe, Ni, Be, REE’s, Hg, PGE) and industrial mineral (diatomite, barite, perlite, kaolinite...
Authors
Albert H. Hofstra, Alan R. Wallace
Geology and geochemistry of jasperoids from the Gold Bar district, Nevada Geology and geochemistry of jasperoids from the Gold Bar district, Nevada
Gold Bar is one of several Carlin-type gold mining districts located in the Battle Mountain-Eureka trend, Nevada. It is composed of one main deposit, Gold Bar; five satellite deposits; and four resources that contain 1.6 Moz (50 t) of gold. All of the deposits and resources occur at the intersection of north-northwest- and northeast-trending high-angle faults in slope facies limestones...
Authors
O. Yigit, A. H. Hofstra, M.W. Hitzman, E.P. Nelson
The giant Carlin gold province: A protracted interplay of orogenic, basinal, and hydrothermal processes above a lithospheric boundary The giant Carlin gold province: A protracted interplay of orogenic, basinal, and hydrothermal processes above a lithospheric boundary
Northern Nevada hosts the only province that contains multiple world-class Carlin-type gold deposits. The first-order control on the uniqueness of this province is its anomalous far back-arc tectonic setting over the rifted North American paleocontinental margin that separates Precambrian from Phanerozoic subcontinental lithospheric mantle. Globally, most other significant gold provinces...
Authors
P. Emsbo, D.I. Groves, A. H. Hofstra, F.P. Bierlein
A special issue devoted to gold deposits in northern Nevada: Part 2. Carlin-type Deposits A special issue devoted to gold deposits in northern Nevada: Part 2. Carlin-type Deposits
This is the second of two special issues of Economic Geology devoted to gold deposits in northern Nevada. Readers interested in a general overview of these deposits, their economic significance, their context within the tectonic evolution of the region, and synoptic references on each gold deposit type are directed to the preface of the first special issue (John et al., 2003). Volume 98...
Authors
Albert H. Hofstra, David A. John, Ted G. Theodore
Origin and significance of postore dissolution collapse breccias cemented with calcite and barite at the Meikle gold deposit, Northern Carlin trend, Nevada Origin and significance of postore dissolution collapse breccias cemented with calcite and barite at the Meikle gold deposit, Northern Carlin trend, Nevada
The final event in a complicated hydrothermal history at the Meikle gold deposit was gold deficient but caused extensive postore dissolution of carbonate, collapse brecciation, and precipitation of calcite and barite crystals in the resulting cavities. Although previously interpreted to be part of the Carlin-type hydrothermal system, crosscutting relationships and U-Th-Pb geochronology...
Authors
P. Emsbo, A. H. Hofstra
A special issue devoted to gold deposits in Northern Nevada: Part 1. Regional studies and epitherrmal deposits A special issue devoted to gold deposits in Northern Nevada: Part 1. Regional studies and epitherrmal deposits
No abstract available.
Authors
D. A. John, A. H. Hofstra, T. G. Theodore
Geologic setting and genesis of the Mule Canyon low-sulfidation epithermal gold-silver deposit, north-central Nevada Geologic setting and genesis of the Mule Canyon low-sulfidation epithermal gold-silver deposit, north-central Nevada
The Mule Canyon mine exploited shallow, low-sulfidation, epithermal Au-Ag deposits that lie near the west side of the Northern Nevada rift in northern Lander County, Nevada. Mule Canyon consists of six small deposits that contained premining reserves of about 8.2 Mt at an average grade of 3.81 g Au/tonne. It is an uncommon mafic end member of low-sulfidation Au-Ag deposits associated...
Authors
D. A. John, A. H. Hofstra, R.J. Fleck, J.E. Brummer, E.C. Saderholm
The Tuscarora Au-Ag district: Eocene volcanic-hosted epithermal deposits in the Carlin gold region, Nevada The Tuscarora Au-Ag district: Eocene volcanic-hosted epithermal deposits in the Carlin gold region, Nevada
The Tuscarora mining district contains the oldest and the only productive Eocene epithermal deposits in Nevada. The district is a particularly clear example of association of low-sulfidation deposits with igneous activity and structure, and it is unusual in that it consists of two adjoining but physically and chemically distinct types of low-sulfidation deposits. Moreover, Tuscarora...
Authors
S.B. Castor, D.R. Boden, C.D. Henry, J. S. Cline, A. H. Hofstra, W. C. McIntosh, R. M. Tosdal, J.P. Wooden
Lithogeochemistry of Carlin-type gold mineralization in the Gold Bar district, Battle Mountain-Eureka trend, Nevada Lithogeochemistry of Carlin-type gold mineralization in the Gold Bar district, Battle Mountain-Eureka trend, Nevada
The Gold Bar district contains five Carlin-type gold deposits and four resources for a combined gold endowment of 1.6 M oz [50 t]. The gold deposits are hosted in Devonian carbonate rocks below parautochthonous and allochthonous Paleozoic siliciclastic rocks emplaced during the Early Mississippian Antler orogeny. The district is in the Battle Mountain-Eureka trend, a long-lived...
Authors
O. Yigit, A. H. Hofstra
Alligator ridge district, East-Central Nevada: Carlin-type gold mineralization at shallow depths Alligator ridge district, East-Central Nevada: Carlin-type gold mineralization at shallow depths
Carlin-type deposits in the Alligator Ridge mining district are present sporadically for 40 km along the north-striking Mooney Basin fault system but are restricted to a 250-m interval of Devonian to Mississippian strata. Their age is bracketed between silicified ca. 45 Ma sedimentary rocks and unaltered 36.5 to 34 Ma volcanic rocks. The silicification is linked to the deposits by its...
Authors
C.J. Nutt, A. H. Hofstra
Origin of high-grade gold ore, source of ore fluid components, and genesis of the Meikle and neighboring Carlin-type deposits, Northern Carlin Trend, Nevada Origin of high-grade gold ore, source of ore fluid components, and genesis of the Meikle and neighboring Carlin-type deposits, Northern Carlin Trend, Nevada
The Meikle mine exploits one of the world's highest grade Carlin-type gold deposits with reserves of ca. 220 t gold at an average grade of 24.7 g/t. Locally, gold grades exceed 400 g/t. Several geologic events converged at Meikle to create these spectacular gold grades. Prior to mineralization, a Devonian hydrothermal system altered the Bootstrap limestone to Fe-rich dolomite...
Authors
P. Emsbo, A. H. Hofstra, E.A. Lauha, G.L. Griffin, R.W. Hutchinson
Science and Products
Filter Total Items: 82
Bald Mountain gold mining district, Nevada: A Jurassic reduced intrusion-related gold system Bald Mountain gold mining district, Nevada: A Jurassic reduced intrusion-related gold system
The Bald Mountain mining district has produced about 2 million ounces (Moz) of An. Geologic mapping, field relationships, geochemical data, petrographic observations, fluid inclusion characteristics, and Pb, S, O, and H isotope data indicate that An mineralization was associated with a reduced Jurassic intrusion. Gold deposits are localized within and surrounding a Jurassic (159 Ma)...
Authors
C.J. Nutt, A. H. Hofstra
Metallogeny of the Great Basin: Crustal evolution, fluid flow, and ore deposits Metallogeny of the Great Basin: Crustal evolution, fluid flow, and ore deposits
The Great Basin physiographic province in the Western United States contains a diverse assortment of world-class ore deposits. It currently (2006) is the world’s second leading producer of gold, contains large silver and base metal (Cu, Zn, Pb, Mo, W) deposits, a variety of other important metallic (Fe, Ni, Be, REE’s, Hg, PGE) and industrial mineral (diatomite, barite, perlite, kaolinite...
Authors
Albert H. Hofstra, Alan R. Wallace
Geology and geochemistry of jasperoids from the Gold Bar district, Nevada Geology and geochemistry of jasperoids from the Gold Bar district, Nevada
Gold Bar is one of several Carlin-type gold mining districts located in the Battle Mountain-Eureka trend, Nevada. It is composed of one main deposit, Gold Bar; five satellite deposits; and four resources that contain 1.6 Moz (50 t) of gold. All of the deposits and resources occur at the intersection of north-northwest- and northeast-trending high-angle faults in slope facies limestones...
Authors
O. Yigit, A. H. Hofstra, M.W. Hitzman, E.P. Nelson
The giant Carlin gold province: A protracted interplay of orogenic, basinal, and hydrothermal processes above a lithospheric boundary The giant Carlin gold province: A protracted interplay of orogenic, basinal, and hydrothermal processes above a lithospheric boundary
Northern Nevada hosts the only province that contains multiple world-class Carlin-type gold deposits. The first-order control on the uniqueness of this province is its anomalous far back-arc tectonic setting over the rifted North American paleocontinental margin that separates Precambrian from Phanerozoic subcontinental lithospheric mantle. Globally, most other significant gold provinces...
Authors
P. Emsbo, D.I. Groves, A. H. Hofstra, F.P. Bierlein
A special issue devoted to gold deposits in northern Nevada: Part 2. Carlin-type Deposits A special issue devoted to gold deposits in northern Nevada: Part 2. Carlin-type Deposits
This is the second of two special issues of Economic Geology devoted to gold deposits in northern Nevada. Readers interested in a general overview of these deposits, their economic significance, their context within the tectonic evolution of the region, and synoptic references on each gold deposit type are directed to the preface of the first special issue (John et al., 2003). Volume 98...
Authors
Albert H. Hofstra, David A. John, Ted G. Theodore
Origin and significance of postore dissolution collapse breccias cemented with calcite and barite at the Meikle gold deposit, Northern Carlin trend, Nevada Origin and significance of postore dissolution collapse breccias cemented with calcite and barite at the Meikle gold deposit, Northern Carlin trend, Nevada
The final event in a complicated hydrothermal history at the Meikle gold deposit was gold deficient but caused extensive postore dissolution of carbonate, collapse brecciation, and precipitation of calcite and barite crystals in the resulting cavities. Although previously interpreted to be part of the Carlin-type hydrothermal system, crosscutting relationships and U-Th-Pb geochronology...
Authors
P. Emsbo, A. H. Hofstra
A special issue devoted to gold deposits in Northern Nevada: Part 1. Regional studies and epitherrmal deposits A special issue devoted to gold deposits in Northern Nevada: Part 1. Regional studies and epitherrmal deposits
No abstract available.
Authors
D. A. John, A. H. Hofstra, T. G. Theodore
Geologic setting and genesis of the Mule Canyon low-sulfidation epithermal gold-silver deposit, north-central Nevada Geologic setting and genesis of the Mule Canyon low-sulfidation epithermal gold-silver deposit, north-central Nevada
The Mule Canyon mine exploited shallow, low-sulfidation, epithermal Au-Ag deposits that lie near the west side of the Northern Nevada rift in northern Lander County, Nevada. Mule Canyon consists of six small deposits that contained premining reserves of about 8.2 Mt at an average grade of 3.81 g Au/tonne. It is an uncommon mafic end member of low-sulfidation Au-Ag deposits associated...
Authors
D. A. John, A. H. Hofstra, R.J. Fleck, J.E. Brummer, E.C. Saderholm
The Tuscarora Au-Ag district: Eocene volcanic-hosted epithermal deposits in the Carlin gold region, Nevada The Tuscarora Au-Ag district: Eocene volcanic-hosted epithermal deposits in the Carlin gold region, Nevada
The Tuscarora mining district contains the oldest and the only productive Eocene epithermal deposits in Nevada. The district is a particularly clear example of association of low-sulfidation deposits with igneous activity and structure, and it is unusual in that it consists of two adjoining but physically and chemically distinct types of low-sulfidation deposits. Moreover, Tuscarora...
Authors
S.B. Castor, D.R. Boden, C.D. Henry, J. S. Cline, A. H. Hofstra, W. C. McIntosh, R. M. Tosdal, J.P. Wooden
Lithogeochemistry of Carlin-type gold mineralization in the Gold Bar district, Battle Mountain-Eureka trend, Nevada Lithogeochemistry of Carlin-type gold mineralization in the Gold Bar district, Battle Mountain-Eureka trend, Nevada
The Gold Bar district contains five Carlin-type gold deposits and four resources for a combined gold endowment of 1.6 M oz [50 t]. The gold deposits are hosted in Devonian carbonate rocks below parautochthonous and allochthonous Paleozoic siliciclastic rocks emplaced during the Early Mississippian Antler orogeny. The district is in the Battle Mountain-Eureka trend, a long-lived...
Authors
O. Yigit, A. H. Hofstra
Alligator ridge district, East-Central Nevada: Carlin-type gold mineralization at shallow depths Alligator ridge district, East-Central Nevada: Carlin-type gold mineralization at shallow depths
Carlin-type deposits in the Alligator Ridge mining district are present sporadically for 40 km along the north-striking Mooney Basin fault system but are restricted to a 250-m interval of Devonian to Mississippian strata. Their age is bracketed between silicified ca. 45 Ma sedimentary rocks and unaltered 36.5 to 34 Ma volcanic rocks. The silicification is linked to the deposits by its...
Authors
C.J. Nutt, A. H. Hofstra
Origin of high-grade gold ore, source of ore fluid components, and genesis of the Meikle and neighboring Carlin-type deposits, Northern Carlin Trend, Nevada Origin of high-grade gold ore, source of ore fluid components, and genesis of the Meikle and neighboring Carlin-type deposits, Northern Carlin Trend, Nevada
The Meikle mine exploits one of the world's highest grade Carlin-type gold deposits with reserves of ca. 220 t gold at an average grade of 24.7 g/t. Locally, gold grades exceed 400 g/t. Several geologic events converged at Meikle to create these spectacular gold grades. Prior to mineralization, a Devonian hydrothermal system altered the Bootstrap limestone to Fe-rich dolomite...
Authors
P. Emsbo, A. H. Hofstra, E.A. Lauha, G.L. Griffin, R.W. Hutchinson