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- University of Arizona | (
www.arizona.edu) Posted: 9/16/2002 |
Scientists
Discover That 40 Percent Of The World's Gold Is 3 Billion Years Old
Scientists have for the first time directly dated gold from South Africa's
Witwatersrand gold deposits, source of more than 40 percent of all gold so far
mined on Earth. An international team of geologists led by the University of
Arizona has discovered that the gold is around 3 billion years old -- older
than its surrounding conglomerate rock by a quarter of a billion years. More,
their state-of-the-art dating technique shows that the gold deposits formed
along with crustal rock directly from the mantle beneath South Africa. The
event at this magnitude appears to be unique in Earth's geologic history.
Jason Kirk, Joaquin Ruiz and John Chesley of the UA, John Walshe of Australia's
Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation and Gavin England
of the University of Edinburgh report on it in the Sept. 13 issue of Science.
The Witwatersrand gold is found in a sedimentary basin. But the age and origin
of the gold has been hotly debated. One theory argues that the gold was carried
into the basin by sedimentary processes. A conflicting theory holds that
hydrothermal fluids --the equivalent of hot springs -- emplaced the gold from
the upper continental crust.
The new results confirm that the Witwatersrand gold deposits are "placer”
deposits -- that millions of years ago, ancient rivers carried gold particles,
along with sand and silt, into the Witwatersrand basin – then a great lake --
possibly from granite mountains to the north and southwest.
Over time and under pressure, the gold-bearing sediments solidified into rock,
forming the rich gold-bearing reefs of South Africa's 'golden arc,' which have
been mined since their discovery in 1886.
The UA scientists' new findings confirm that the gold first formed in older
rocks, rocks that formed when upwelling mantle formed a major piece of South
African continental crust called the Kaapvaal craton. Cratons are areas of
Earth's crust that have remained tectonically stable over time. The Kaapvaal
craton is one of the oldest known.
Later, the gold was weathered and reconcentrated in the Witwatersrand paleolake
sediments.
Kirk is studying the age and extent of gold deposits around the world for a UA
doctoral geosciences degree. He uses a rhenium-osmium isotope gold-dating
technique developed by Ruiz at the university's NTIMS laboratory.
Ruiz, dean of the UA College of Science and professor of geosciences, was
instrumental in developing the Negative Thermal Ionization Mass Spectrometer
(NTIMS) with a grant from the W. M. Keck Foundation. The laboratory is one of
the few of its kind in the world.
"This is precisely the kind of research that I envisioned when I was
building the laboratory," Ruiz said. "The analytical capabilities of
the W.M. Keck Laboratory is such that we will continue to discover aspects of
how the Earth worked, questions that previously we could only dream of."
Gold and other minerals contain a rare metallic chemical element called
rhenium. Rhenium-187 is the radioactive form of the element. NTIMS directly
dates minerals by counting the number of their rhenium-187 and osmium-187
atoms. Rhenium-187 has a half -life of 45 billion years, or about 10 times the
age of our solar system. It decays into osmium-187. So by determining the ratio
of radioactive rhenium-187 to daughter osmium-187 atoms,
scientists can directly calculate when the minerals formed.
"One of the
reasons I think our results are so significant is that the rhenium-osmium
system can be used directly on gold, and can also tell us if the gold came from
the mantle or the crust," Kirk said.
There is relatively more rhenium than osmium in Earth's crust, but relatively
more osmium than rhenium in Earth's mantle.
"Witwatersrand has a clear mantle signature," Kirk said. "It's
possible that this mantle signature is so big because at 3 billion years ago,
Earth's mantle might have been hotter, and richer in gold at this particular
spot, compared to more recent deposits." People, understandably, are
keenly interested in why South Africa has been so blessed with gold. The
Witwatersrand gold fields have yielded a half-trillion dollars' worth of gold
since 1886.
"Estimates are that there's another half-trillion dollars in gold still to
be mined, and that's a lot of money," Kirk said.