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Hydrogen and hydrocarbons associated with the Neoarchean Frog’s Leg Gold Camp, Yilgarn Craton, Western Australia

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Created 20/01/2025

Updated 20/01/2025

High concentrations of hydrogen (H2) and methane have been detected in shallow open-hole exploration wells surrounding the Neoarchean Frog’s Leg gold camp in the Eastern Goldfields, Yilgarn Craton, Western Australia. After corrections for modern air contaminants and excess nitrogen (N2) the Boomer deposit gases contain: 19.9‒68.7 mol% H2; 28.7‒76.9 mol% CH4; 0.47‒1.6 mol% heavier hydrocarbons (C2‒C5), which follow an Anderson-Schulz-Flory distribution; 0.11‒3.3 mol% carbon dioxide; and 0.69‒1.87 mol% helium (He). The isotopic composition of the gas components was further investigated: helium has 3He/4He ratios of 1.82‒3.33×10-8 (or 0.01-0.02 Ra, where Ra is the atmospheric value) indicating a purely crustal origin; hydrogen has δ2H between -781.3 ‰ and -759.5 ‰; and methane hasδ13C between -20.3 and -2.42 ‰ and δ2H between -382.5 ‰ and -342.2 ‰. The C2-C5 gaseous hydrocarbons are commonly depleted in 13C (up to 22.75 ‰ for ethane) and enriched in 2H (up to 117.3 ‰ for iso-butane) compared to methane while carbon isotope reversal is observed between methane and ethane. These molecular and isotopic characteristics of the gas are consistent with 1) H2 generation controlled by redox and/or radiolytic reactions within basic and felsic igneous rocks, and 2) methane and C2+ gaseous hydrocarbons produced during serpentinization of mafic‒ultramafic rocks. Serpentinization due to ingress of groundwater can produce voluminous free H2. Subsequent, gas phase Fischer-Tropsch type reactions with limiting CO2 (from carbonate dissolution) lead to abiogenic methane enriched in 13C and to the generation of C2‒C5 wet gases. Radiolytic-controlled processes also occur in parallel, where mafics‒ultramafics and granites and their related eroded sediments promote abiogenic radiolysis of water and polymerisation of methane. Using the H2‒CH4 hydrogen isotopic fractionations as a geothermometer, isotopic equilibrium temperatures are calculated between 42.2 °C and 57.0 °C, representing minimum 1.4‒2.7 km sub-surface depths for the gas sources, corresponding to the Gleesons Basalt as a major gas contributor. The processes of gold mineralisation billions of years ago laid the foundation for the supply of catalytic metal/metal ions and carbonate (CO2) source for later independent, abiogenic gas formation. The free gases sampled from exploration wells in the Boomer deposit, Frog’s Leg Gold Camp represent the first positive identification of abiogenic natural gas in Australia, with gas compositions similar to abiogenic gases previously reported from overseas Archean cratons. Interestingly, gases preserved in fluid inclusions associated with some of the region’s other lode gold deposits demonstrate CH4 production has likely occurred over a period from the Neoarchean to present in the Yilgarn Craton. Citation: Christopher J. Boreham, Jacob H. Sohn, Nicholas Cox, Jodi Williams, Ziqing Hong, Mark A. Kendrick, Hydrogen and hydrocarbons associated with the Neoarchean Frog's Leg Gold Camp, Yilgarn Craton, Western Australia, Chemical Geology, Volume 575, 2021, 120098, ISSN 0009-2541, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chemgeo.2021.120098.

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Title Hydrogen and hydrocarbons associated with the Neoarchean Frog’s Leg Gold Camp, Yilgarn Craton, Western Australia
Language eng
Licence notspecified
Landing Page https://devweb.dga.links.com.au/data/dataset/217bd261-f910-4036-8d35-99e0de3775c3
Contact Point
Geoscience Australia
clientservices@ga.gov.au
Reference Period 08/04/2019
Geospatial Coverage {"type": "Polygon", "coordinates": [[[114.3432, -35.5122], [124.1966, -35.5122], [124.1966, -26.5303], [114.3432, -26.5303], [114.3432, -35.5122]]]}
Data Portal data.gov.au