El Indio Gold Belt

Rodalquilarite, a rare iron tellurite chloride mineral from the Wendy open pit, Tambo Mine in Chile
Specimen from the Tambo mine with gold-alunite-rodalquilarite mineraliztiion

The El Indio Gold Belt is a mineral-rich region spanning the border between Chile and Argentina that contains large quantities of gold, silver and copper. On both sides of the border the belt is located within the Andes.[1] The El Indio mine within the district was the first modern mine in Chile to produce gold as its main product. In Chile the main precious metal containing mineral is enargite. The El Indio belt is bordered in the north by another gold-silver mining district known as the Frontera District.[2] Rodalquilarite, alunite and poughite are some of the minerals present in the area.[3] The deposits of the belt formed during the Late Miocene period.[4]

The world's largest gold mining company, Barrick Gold, used to be the only foreign company heavily invested in the region however more recently a number of other companies have begun exploratory activity.[citation needed]

Walfordite in alunite, individual microscopic crystal, Tambo Mine, El Indio area. Tambo is the type area, and only known occurrence, for this rare tellurite mineral.
  1. ^ "El Indio and Tambo. (mining sites in the Andes Mountains in Chile)". 1996-05-01. Archived from the original on 2006-12-21.
  2. ^ "Veladero Mine (Argentina)". Archived from the original on 2010-11-28. Retrieved 2010-11-30.
  3. ^ Minerals from the Tambo Mine
  4. ^ "Miocene El Indio epithermal gold belt (Northern Chile): an evolving tectonomagmatic scenario". Society for Geology Applied to Mineral Deposits. 2007.