Tasmania
Kenex
has been undertaking exploration in Tasmania since 2006 when a new
style of mineral deposit was introduced to explorers with the type
deposit located at Avebury in Tasmania. The granite-related nickel
skarn system was only recently recognised and is associated with
remobilisation of nickel from ultramafic host rocks during granite
intrusion. This style of nickel mineralisation is thought to have
formed when Cambrian ultramafic rocks were intruded by Carboniferous
granites. It is believed that during granite intrusion, associated
fluids leached nickel from nearby mafic lithologies, which combined
with sulphur in the granitic fluids to form nickel sulphides. The
nickel sulphide deposits at Avebury are located along the margins of
folded and faulted ultramafic bodies which are in contact with
metamorphosed and altered sediments. At these locations mobilised
fluids trapped and concentrated nickel sulphides in the ultramafic
hosts or in the adjacent metasedimentary units. The Avebury nickel
deposit in western Tasmania is the type example of the
granite-related nickel skarn style of mineralisation and is
currently being mined by Allegiance Mining.
As
the lithologies near Avebury are not unique, it is believed that similar
deposits could exist elsewhere in Tasmania and further afield in Australia or
New Zealand. The relationships between the geology and the mineralisation are
easily recognised spatially and temporally and Kenex has generated a
prospectivity model to locate areas in Tasmania where other deposit like the
Avebury could be located. A GIS based weights of evidence modelling technique
provided an ideal tool for indentifying areas with similar geological conditions
for future granite-related nickel skarn exploration. Using modern GIS modelling
software and currently available digital data from geological surveys in
Australia this modelling has allowed our clients to target areas previously
unexplored which have highly favourable geological conditions for a
granite-related nickel skarn deposit.
The weights of evidence spatial modelling technique required expert knowledge about the deposit mineral system and included geological mapping, geological structural interpretations, geochemistry and geophysics. The main geological features from the Avebury mineral system model were used to develop predictive themes representing all stages of the mineral systems model. Existing economic deposits were used as training data to weight the model themes and these weighted themes were then combined to create a prospectivity map showing areas favourable for granite-related nickel deposits. The model highlighted the importance of geological and geochemical data sets as predictors of mineralisation and has identified several regions similar to the Avebury Deposit that have good potential to host nickel sulphide mineralisation. These targets were ranked and the most prospective were chosen for follow-up investigation and several new exploration permits were acquired by our clients in Tasmania. As well as finding targets in Tasmania the model also identified areas else where in Australia with similar geological conditions to Avebury and the map below shows how the granite-related nickel skarn model was used to target new exploration permits near Rockhampton in Queensland for Accord Mining Pty Ltd.
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Prospectivity modelling results for the Rockhampton region increasing from prospective (dark blue) to highly prospective (pink) overlain by Accord Mining tenements (black outlines). |
For more information please read our paper on the modelling study presented at the PACRIM conference in 2008 or please contact Greg here at Kenex.

