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Authors
Affiliations
1 Department of Geology, University of Kerala, Trivandrum 695581, IN
Source
Journal of Geological Society of India (Online archive from Vol 1 to Vol 78), Vol 35, No 5 (1990), Pagination: 514-519
Abstract
At Marutha, located in the high-grade granulite terrain of South India, gold in association with pyrite and chalcopyrite occurs along the contacts of quartz veins with amphibolite. Structures of the area were produced during two deformational events. Gold-bearing quartz veins were formed before the onset of second deformational event. Amphibolite of Marutha, geochemically comparable with the metavolcanics of Kolar and Hutti, is derived from low-K-tholeiitic basalt and has no komatiitic affinity. Tholeiitic basalt is the probable source of gold at Marutha.
Keywords
Economic Geology, Gold, Kerala, Precambrian, Marutha.