Earthquakes have the Midas touch, a new study claims.
Water in
faults vaporizes during an earthquake, depositing gold, according to a
model published in the March 17 issue of the journal Nature Geoscience.
The model provides a quantitative mechanism for the link between gold
and quartz seen in many of the world's gold deposits, said Dion
Weatherley, a geophysicist at the University of Queensland in Australia
and lead author of the study.
When an earthquake strikes, it
moves along a rupture in the ground — a fracture called a fault. Big
faults can have many small fractures along their length, connected by
jogs that appear as rectangular voids. Water often lubricates faults, filling in fractures and jogs.
Shake, rattle and gold
During
an earthquake, the fault jog suddenly opens wider. It's like pulling
the lid off a pressure cooker: The water inside the void instantly
vaporizes, flashing to steam and forcing silica, which forms the
mineral quartz, and gold out of the fluids and onto nearby surfaces,
suggest Weatherley and co-author Richard Henley, of the Australian
National University in Canberra.
While scientists have long
suspected that sudden pressure drops could account for the link between
giant gold deposits and ancient faults, the study takes this idea to
the extreme, said Jamie Wilkinson, a geochemist at Imperial College
London in the United Kingdom, who was not involved in the study.
"To
me, it seems pretty plausible. It's something that people would
probably want to model either experimentally or numerically in a bit
more detail to see if it would actually work," Wilkinson told
OurAmazingPlanet.
Previously, scientists suspected fluids would
effervesce, bubbling like an opened soda bottle, during earthquakes or
other pressure changes. This would line underground pockets with gold. Others suggested minerals would simply accumulate slowly over time.
Weatherley
said the amount of gold left behind after an earthquake is tiny,
because underground fluids carry at most only one part per million of
the precious element. But an earthquake zone like New Zealand's Alpine Fault, one of the world's fastest, could build a mineable deposit in 100,000 years, he said.
Surprisingly,
the quartz doesn't even have time to crystallize, the study indicates.
Instead, the mineral comes out of the fluid in the form of
nanoparticles, perhaps even making a gel-like substance on the fracture
walls. The quartz nanoparticles then crystallize over time.
Even
earthquakes smaller than magnitude 4.0, which may rattle nerves but
rarely cause damage, can trigger flash vaporization, the study finds.
"Given
that small-magnitude earthquakes are exceptionally frequent in fault
systems, this process may be the primary driver for the formation of
economic gold deposits," Weatherley told OurAmazingPlanet.
The hills have gold
Quartz-linked
gold has sourced some famous deposits, such as the placer gold that
sparked the 19th-century California and Klondike gold rushes. Both
deposits had eroded from quartz veins upstream. Placer gold
consists of particles, flakes and nuggets mixed in with sand and gravel
in stream and river beds. Prospectors traced the gravels back to their
sources, where hard-rock mining continues today.
But earthquakes aren't the only cataclysmic source of gold. Volcanoes
and their underground plumbing are just as prolific, if not more so,
at producing the precious metal. While Weatherley and Henley suggest
that a similar process could take place under volcanoes, Wilkinson, who
studies volcano-linked gold, said that's not the case.
"Beneath
volcanoes, most of the gold is not precipitated in faults that are
active during earthquakes," Wilkinson said. "It's a very different
mechanism."
Understanding how gold forms helps companies prospect
for new mines. "This new knowledge on gold-deposit formation mechanisms
may assist future gold exploration efforts," Weatherley said.
In
their quest for gold, humans have pulled more than 188,000 tons
(171,000 metric tons) of the metal from the ground, exhausting easily
accessed sources, according to the World Gold Council, an industry
group.
Source: NBC News Science
That strange I was plumber in Alpine, NJ for several years, are you hiring ??
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