The Que River deposit in western Tasmania is a high-grade, gold-rich, Cambrian volcanogenic sulfide deposit, comprising two major subvertical ore lenses hosted by andesitic lavas and volcaniclastics of the Mount Read Volcanics. Contrary to previous published interpretations, the major orebodies (PQ and P north lenses) are considered to lie at the same stratigraphic level and be folded into a tight asymmetric syncline which has been sheared along its western limb. Massive sulfides are thickened in the hinge of the syncline. Extensive footwall stringer pyrite-galena-sphalerite mineralization within strongly altered andesitic volcaniclastics occurs on both limbs of the fold. A copper-bearing pyrite-rich stringer zone occurs immediately below t...