A Discussion on natural strain and geological structure - Mt Isa — reconstruction of a faulted ore body

A major geological problem in the Mount Isa District is the significance of the flat greenstone contact which underlies the copper ore bodies at the Isa Mine. Recent structural studies have shown this surface to be one of a set of curved normal faults which flatten in depth and are termed spoon faults. Displacement on the spoon faults ranges upward of 2 km and total extension for the spoon fault domain exceeds 80 km. The domain is bounded by tear faults of which the M ount Isa fault is an example. Reconstruction of the spoon fault domain gives insight to the sedimentary basin which originally included the Mount Isa ore bodies. The reconstruction indicates Isa and Hilton to be two faulted parts of the same ore basin and probably of the same ore body. It also strongly suggests a central concealed part to occur between Isa and Hilton. The extreme extension of the spoon fault domain coupled with the thick basic volcanic section suggests that the domain represents an ancient zone of crustal tension initiated by shear along a curved cratonic boundary.

2018 ◽  
Vol 14 (15) ◽  
pp. 1
Author(s):  
Sirelda Bele

Munella's deposit is one of the most important mineral deposits of Albania. It is rich in mineral resources such as copper, zinc, gold, etc. For this reason Geological 3D modeling is very important because it gives detailed information on management in the most optimal way to mine. In this article, 3D modeling of copper bodies was carried out through modeling software using the implicit method. This method uses advanced algorithms that are Polyharmonic Radial Basis Functions (RBF) generates the best surface area of the ore that can have some Z values and can perfectly customize the incomplete surfaces by utilizing 211 drilling data. The ore bodies that are created with this method are divided into blocks that represent the distribution of copper in%. The results achieved in this study provide an accurate overview of the most important sources of deposits and major concentrations of copper for the efficient management and exploitation of the mine.


Author(s):  
A. N. Glukhov ◽  
◽  
M. I. Fomina ◽  
E. E. Kolova ◽  
◽  
...  

The authors briefly characterize the geology and structure of the Shtokovoye ore field attached to the area where the Khurchan-Orotukan zone of tectonic-magmatic activation overlays the structures of the Yana-Kolyma ore-bearing belt. Studied are mineral associations and physicochemical conditions of gold ore bodies, located both in granites and in hornfelsed sedimentary masses. By the main features of its geological structure, ore composition, and physicochemical formation conditions, the Shtokovoye ore field mineralization corresponds to the "depth" group of the gold-rare-metal formation, analogous to the Butarnoye, Basugunyinskiye, Dubach, and Nadezhda occurrences. Its ores are peculiar in the late epithermal mineralization, which is associated with the Okhotsk-Chukotka volcanic belt and overlays the sinaccretional gold-rare-metal mineralization.


Geosphere ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 16 (4) ◽  
pp. 1012-1041
Author(s):  
Cathy Busby ◽  
Alison Graettinger ◽  
Margarita López Martínez ◽  
Sarah Medynski ◽  
Tina Niemi ◽  
...  

Abstract The Gulf of California is an archetype of continental rupture through transtensional rifting, and exploitation of a thermally weakened arc to produce a rift. Volcanic rocks of central Baja California record the transition from calcalkaline arc magmatism, due to subduction of the Farallon plate (ca. 24–12 Ma), to rift magmatism, related to the opening of the Gulf of California (<12 Ma). In addition, a suite of postsubduction rocks (<12 Ma), referred to as “bajaites,” are enriched in light rare-earth and other incompatible elements (e.g., Ba and Sr). These are further subdivided into high-magnesian andesite (with 50%–58% SiO2 and MgO >4%) and adakite (>56% SiO2 and MgO <3%). The bajaites correlate spatially with a fossil slab imaged under central Baja and are inferred to record postsubduction melting of the slab and subduction-modified mantle by asthenospheric upwelling associated with rifting or slab breakoff. We report on volcanic rocks of all three suites, which surround and underlie the Santa Rosalía sedimentary rift basin. This area represents the western margin of the Guaymas basin, the most magmatically robust segment of the Gulf of California rift, where seafloor spreading occurred in isolation for 3–4 m.y. (starting at 6 Ma) before transtensional pull-apart basins to the north and south ruptured the continental crust. Outcrops of the Santa Rosalía area thus offer the opportunity to understand the magmatic evolution of the Guaymas rift, which has been the focus of numerous oceanographic expeditions. We describe 21 distinct volcanic and hypabyssal map units in the Santa Rosalía area, using field characteristics, petrographic data, and major- and trace-element geochemical data, as well as zircon isotopic data and ten new 40Ar-39Ar ages. Lithofacies include lavas and lava domes, block-and-ash-flow tuffs, ignimbrites, and hypabyssal intrusions (plugs, dikes, and peperites). Calcalkaline volcanic rocks (13.81–10.11 Ma) pass conformably upsection, with no time gap, into volcanic rocks with rift transitional chemistry (9.69–8.84 Ma). The onset of rifting was marked by explosive eruption of silicic ignimbrite (tuff of El Morro), possibly from a caldera, similar to the onset of rifting or accelerated rifting in other parts of the Gulf of California. Epsilon Hf zircon data are consistent with a rift transitional setting for the tuff of El Morro. Arc and rift volcanic rocks were then juxtaposed by normal faults and tilted eastward toward a north-south fault that lay offshore, likely related to the north-south normal faults documented for the early history of the Guaymas basin, prior to the onset of northwest-southeast transtenional faulting. Magmatism in the Santa Rosalía area resumed with emplacement of high-magnesian andesite lavas and intrusions, at 6.06 Ma ± 0.27 Ma, coeval with the onset of seafloor spreading in the Guaymas basin at ca. 6 Ma. The 9.69–8.84 Ma rift transitional volcanic rocks underlying the Santa Rosalía sedimentary basin provide a maximum age on its basal fill. Evaporites in the Santa Rosalía sedimentary basin formed on the margin of the Guaymas basin, where thicker evaporites formed. Overlying coarse-grained clastic sedimentary fill of the Santa Rosalía basin and its stratiform Cu-Co-Zn-Mn sulfides may have accumulated rapidly, coeval with emplacement of 6.06 Ma high-magnesian andesite intrusions and the ca. 6 Ma onset of seafloor spreading in the Guaymas basin.


2020 ◽  
Vol 174 ◽  
pp. 01013
Author(s):  
Hung Nguyen Phi ◽  
Thang Pham Duc

There are various types of underground mining that are categorized based on the kind of shafts used, the technique of extraction and the process used to get to a deposit. Development mining is composed of excavation almost entirely in (non-valuable) waste rock in order to gain access to the orebody. To start the mining, the first step is to make the path to go down. Development, the work of opening a mineral deposit for exploitation is performed. With it begins the actual mining of the deposit. Access to the deposit must be gained either by stripping the overburden, which is the soil and/or rock covering the deposit,to expose the near- surface ore for mining or by excavating openings from the surface to access more deeply buried deposits to prepare for underground mining. The type of underground mining technique used is typically based on the geology of the area, especially the amount of ground support needed to make mining safe. When using to exploit ore body by underground mining method, the textbook guide in universities of Vietnam had had 4 main strategies include: access by horizontal tunnel lines, access by incline shaft, vertical shaft and combination of above access method. In this study, we developed a solution outside of four above approaches, to take advantage of the topography, transport potential energy, and advantages when constructing sloped incline, backward from outside to inside.


1989 ◽  
Vol 126 (1) ◽  
pp. 43-53 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. W. Passchier ◽  
P. R. Williams

AbstractThe earliest of four distinct phases of deformation recognized in the central part of the Proterozoic Mount Isa inlier involved brittle extensional faulting at shallow crustal levels. Extensional faulting produced stacks of imbricate fault slices, listric normal faults and characteristic tourmalinerich breccias. Structures belonging to this phase occur over a large part of the inlier and indicate an important phase of basin-forming crustal or lithospheric extension at 1750–1730 Ma. Late intense ductile deformation and tight folding of the imbricate systems destroyed part of these older structures, and obscures their existence in many parts of the inlier.


2014 ◽  
Vol 962-965 ◽  
pp. 1041-1046
Author(s):  
Qi Fa Ge ◽  
Xue Sen Sun ◽  
Wei Gen Zhu ◽  
Qing Gang Chen

There are many problems such as depth, high in-situ stress, high ground temperature and rockburst proneness etc. in deep mining. And it is an acknowledged and urgent mining technical puzzle about mining method of gently inclined and medium-thick ore bodies. For such an ore body in West wing of Dongguashan copper mine, if we use traditional mining method, it is hard to conquer such difficulties as high in-situ stress, large open area in roof, removal of mined ore by gravity etc. The theory of “large panel and lower sublevel height” will be easy to solve such problems. This paper use numerical technology to analyze and compare the technical and economical effectiveness for different selected mining method and its structure. The sublevel (at a height of 12 m) open stoping with back-filling by extraction in two steps is quite suitable for ensuring safety, increasing efficiency, productivity and reclaiming resource. The selected method is feasible and well worth spread.


1989 ◽  
Vol 84 (3) ◽  
pp. 529-550 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christoph A. Heinrich ◽  
Anita S. Andrew ◽  
Ronald W. T. Wilkins ◽  
David J. Patterson

Geophysics ◽  
1994 ◽  
Vol 59 (1) ◽  
pp. 57-68 ◽  
Author(s):  
Valeria Cristina F. Barbosa ◽  
João B. C. Silva

Extending the compact gravity inversion technique by incorporating a priori information about the maximum compactness of the anomalous sources along several axes provides versatility. Thus, the method may also incorporate information about limits in the axes lengths or greater concentration of mass along one or more directions. The judicious combination of different constraints on the anomalous mass distribution allows the introduction of several kinds of a priori information about the (arbitrary) shape of the sources. This method is particularly applicable to constant, linear density sources such as mineralizations along faults and intruded sills, dikes, and laccoliths in a sedimentary basin. The correct source density must be known with a maximum uncertainty of 40 percent; otherwise, the inversion produces thicker bodies for densities smaller than the true value and vice‐versa. Because of the limitations of the inverse gravity problem, the proposed technique requires an empirical technique to analyze the sensitivity of solutions to uncertainties in the a priori information. The proposed technique is based on a finite number of acceptable solutions, presumably representative of the ambiguity region. By using standard statistical techniques, each parameter is assigned a coefficient measuring its uncertainty. The known hematite and magnetite ore body shape, in the vicinity of Iron Mountain, MO, was reproduced quite well using this inversion technique.


2020 ◽  
pp. 48-63
Author(s):  
Aleksandr Kokovkin

A new version of genesis of the epithermal gold-silver deposit Kupol (Chukotka), its mineral composition of ores and conditions of ore-localization based on the analysis of published geological materials on the geological structure had purposed in this article. The active thermal ore-forming role of completing the volcanic cycle of the multiphase subvolcanic complex’ the proximal bodies of the Upper Cretaceous rhyolites had been proved. The main factors of this deposit’ formation and the conditions that favored the appearance of large ore bodies and rich ores were considered. The magma chamber, unified faulty magmatic and fluid conductor, rock screen, flank clusters of subvolcanic rhyolite bodies and their integral thermal anomalies that initiated and sustained the deep fluid thermal convection under the screen, its mixing with fractured pore and meteoric waters and formation of gradient temperature zones, were considered among the main factors. The conjugation of these factors in space and time, the active tectonic regime and the long-term preservation of the deformation plan were the favorable conditions for ore formation. They maintained the high permeability of the fluid conductor, prevented a wide dispersion of fluids and provided a telescopic deposition of different mineral parageneses.


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