The Las Cruces deposit is in the eastern end of the Iberian Pyrite Belt (SW Spain). It is currently being
mined by Cobre Las Cruces S.A. The main operation is focused on the supergene Cu-enriched zone (initial
reserves of 17.6 Mt @ 6.2% Cu). An Au-Ag-Pb–rich gossan resource (3.6 Mt @ 3.3% Pb, 2.5 g/t Au, and
56.3 g/t Ag) occurs in the upper part of the deposit. The Au grade ranges from 0.01 ppm to >100 ppm, and
occurs as three different Au ore types: (1) Au mineralization in the upper part of the gossan linked to Fe-oxides
lithofacies, (2) Au concentration in the lower part of the gossan associated with leached black shales, and (3) Au
ore in the cementation zone related to subvertical fractures.
A hydroseparation device has been used to obtain heavy mineral concentrates from selected samples of
different ore types. Reflected-light microscopy, scanning electron microscopy-energy dispersive spectroscopy
(SEM-EDS), and electron probe microanalysis (EPMA) were used to study the separated Au particles. Significant
differences between the defined ore types include the Au-bearing lithologies, mineral associations, textural
features, particle sizes, morphologies, and fineness. Au-rich minerals include native Au, Au-Ag electrum, and
Au-Ag-Hg amalgams. Gold-bearing mineral associations include Pb-oxihalides, Fe-oxides, galena, pyrite, cinnabar,
and Ag-sulfosalts.
The Au enrichment mechanism in the supergene profile involves (1) dissolution of Au from the primary sulfides
as chloride-rich ionic complexes during the weathering of the deposit under subaerial exposure; dissolved
Au is transported downward through the supergene profile under acidic and oxidized conditions; (2) destabilization
of the Au complexes by Fe-controlled redox reactions; as a consequence, coarse-grained, high-fineness
Au particles precipitated in association with Fe-oxyhydroxides. This resulted in secondary concentration in the
upper gossan; and (3) after deposition of cover sediments took place a progressive change in the system conditions
resulting in a later Au remobilization as hydroxidehalide, hydroxide, thiosulfate, and bisulfide complexes in
the lowermost gossan and cementation zone. The main pathways for migration of enriched fluids to the cementation
zone are secondary permeability zones linked to Alpine reactivated faults. Deposition of Au seems to be
related to fluid interaction with reductant lithologies, including black shales and the primary sulfides.