Controls, Expressions, and Discovery Potential of Gold Mineralization in the Central-Eastern Yilgarn Craton, Western Australia: New Insights from an Integrated Targeting Study

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Abstract

This paper presents the results of an integrated targeting study covering the central-eastern Archean Yilgarn Craton of Western Australia, a region renowned for its substantial gold endowment (>40 Moz Au). The cornerstones of this study included custom-built geophysical and remote sensing targeting tools, a new lithostructural interpretation of the area, a targeting model based on the mineral systems approach, and a best-practice mineral potential modeling (MPM) workflow employing five complementary modeling techniques. The geophysical targeting tools were used to identify proximity, association, and abundance relationships between gold mineralization and gravity ridges or edges, as well as 95th-percentile K/Th radiometric and remotely sensed goethite–clay–iron feature depth index ratio anomalies. The lithostructural interpretation revealed structural trends oblique or orthogonal to the NNW-SSE-striking greenstone belts, likely representing important structural controls on gold mineralization. Fry analysis, used to assess the spatial distribution of geological point patterns, showed similar directions of maximum gold occurrence alignment. Together, these observations proved to be strong predictors of gold prospectivity in the MPM component of this targeting study. The MPM not only identified most known gold occurrences but also highlighted several underexplored areas with significant potential. The highest-priority MPM targets represent roughly an order-of-magnitude reduction in search space, the hallmark of a well-performing and practically useful targeting methodology.

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