Utilization of gravity data for figuring out both the hydrothermal alteration zone and the underground structure so that possible geothermal exploitation in the municipality of Isa, Japan

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carlos Pocasangre ◽  
Yasuhiro Fujimitsu ◽  
Jun Nishijima
2014 ◽  
Vol 51 (3) ◽  
pp. 106-112
Author(s):  
Hiroyuki MAEDA ◽  
Masanori KOHNO ◽  
Yoshihiko SEKISHITA ◽  
Satoshi UEMATSU ◽  
Hiroshi NAYA

Geophysics ◽  
1978 ◽  
Vol 43 (5) ◽  
pp. 967-987 ◽  
Author(s):  
William Collins

An airborne spectroradiometer system has been developed to take 500 channel ground target measurements simultaneously in the spectral region between 400 and 1100 nm. Survey flights with the instrument over an exposed hydrothermal alteration zone in Goldfield, Nevada provide the high‐spectral resolution and spatially correlated data necessary to establish a computerized technique for spectral discrimination of limonitic zones that could indicate mineralization. The data generated by the airborne system are used, in particular, to determine the spectral properties of alteration materials as they appear in integrated measurements over extended field areas, to determine which spectral properties are unique under field conditions and will remain unique in the low‐spectral resolution Landsat data, and to determine accurately the nature and magnitude of the relative spectral differences among geologic targets under the broadband configuration. Field measurements from the aircraft are spatially integrated over contiguous 18 m square fields‐of‐view along traverses flown to cover both background and altered rock assemblages. A small spectral signal unique to zones enriched in ferric iron minerals is recoverable in the aircraft data. Based on a differential spectral discriminant, a computer‐compatible method has been devised to extract the ferric iron signal from atmospheric and background terrain and geologically induced variations in Landsat data. The discrimination technique, adapted to satellite spectral data, was applied to the Goldfield region, including the area of known alteration and metallic mineralization. Field reconnaissance and comparison with published maps for this region has affirmed that limonitic alteration is reliably delineated by the computer analysis technique. Assessment of current satellite instrumentation based on the aircraft data analysis indicates that inclusion of more appropriate band‐pass regions in future sensors could increase spectral contrast among geologic targets by 100 percent. Reducing the field‐of‐view can also increase spectral contrast, and can help reduce spectral ambiguities among extended targets.


2014 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 48-61
Author(s):  
Sutarto Sutarto ◽  
Arifudin Idrus ◽  
Sapto Putranto ◽  
Agung Harjoko ◽  
Lucas D Setijadji ◽  
...  

Many Tertiary hydrothermal altered dioritic composition intrusive rocks were found at the Randu Kuning area and its vicinity, Selogiri, including hornblende microdiorite, hornblende-pyroxene diorite and quartz diorite. The hydrothermal fluids which responsible for the alteration and mineralization at the area is associated with the occurence of the horblende microdiorite intrusion. The alteration zone at the Randu Kuning area and its vicinity can be divided intoseveral hydrothermal alteration zones, such as potassic (magnetite-biotite-K feldspar), prophyllitic (chlorite-magnetite-epidote-carbonate), phyllic (quartz-sericite-chlorite) and argillic (clay mineral-sericite). The alteration pattern in the Randu Kuning porphyry Cu-Au deposit is tipically a diorite model characterising by the domination of potassic alteration and prophyllitic zone. Phyllic and argillic alteration types are restrictive found within the fault zones. A lot of porphyry vein types were found and observed at the Randu Kuning area, and classified into at least seven vein types. The paragenetic sequence of those veins from theearliest to the latest respectively are 1). Magnetite-chalcopyrite±quartz-biotite veinlets, 2). Quartz±magnetite (A type) veins, 3). Banded/Laminated quartz-magnetite (M type) veins, 4). Quartz±K feldspar (B type)veins, 5). Quartz with thin centre line sulphide (AB type) veins, 6). Pyrite±chalcopyrite (C type) veinlets, and 7). Pyrite-quartz+chalcopyrire+carbonate (D type) veins. Gold and copper mineralisation of the Randu Kuning Porphyry Cu-Au deposit, mostly related to the presence of quartz veins/veinlets containing sulfide i.e. Quartz with thin centre line sulphide veins, Pyrite±chalcopyrite veinlets, and Pyrite-quartz+chalcopyrire+carbonate veins.


2019 ◽  
Vol 114 (6) ◽  
pp. 1057-1094 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stéphane De Souza ◽  
Benoît Dubé ◽  
Patrick Mercier-Langevin ◽  
Vicki McNicoll ◽  
Céline Dupuis ◽  
...  

Abstract The Canadian Malartic stockwork-disseminated gold deposit is an Archean world-class deposit located in the southern Abitibi greenstone belt. It contains over 332.8 tonnes (t; 10.7 Moz) of Au at a grade of 0.97 ppm, in addition to 160 t (5.14 Moz) of past production (1935–1981). Although the deposit is partly situated within the Larder Lake-Cadillac fault zone, most of the ore occurs up to ~1.5 km to the south of the fault zone. The main hosts of the mineralized zones are greenschist facies turbiditic graywacke and mudstone of the Pontiac Group (~2685–2682 Ma) and predominantly subalkaline ~2678 Ma porphyritic quartz monzodiorite and granodiorite. These intrusions were emplaced during an episode of clastic sedimentation and alkaline to subalkaline magmatism known as the Timiskaming assemblage (<2680–2670 Ma in the southern Abitibi). The orebodies define two main mineralized trends, which are oriented subparallel to the NW-striking S2 cleavage and the E-striking, S-dipping Sladen fault zone. This syn- to post-D2 ductile-brittle to brittle Sladen fault zone is mineralized for more than 3 km along strike. The ore mainly consists of disseminated pyrite in stockworks and replacement zones, with subordinate auriferous quartz veins and breccia. Gold is associated with pyrite and traces of tellurides defining an Au-Te-W ± Ag-Bi-Mo-Pb signature. The orebodies are zoned outward, and most of the higher-grade (>1 ppm Au) ore was deposited as a result of iron sulfidation from silicates and oxides and Na-K metasomatism in carbonatized rocks. The alteration footprint comprises a proximal alteration envelope (K- or Na-feldspar-dolomite-calcite-pyrite ± phlogopite). This proximal alteration zone transitions to an outer shell of altered rocks (biotite-calcite-phengitic white mica), which hosts sub-ppm gold grades and reflects decreasing carbonatization, sulfidation, and aNa+/aH+ or aK+/aH+ of the ore fluid. Gold mineralization, with an inferred age of ~2664 Ma (Re-Os molybdenite), was contemporaneous with syn- to late-D2 peak metamorphism in the Pontiac Group; it postdates sedimentation of the Timiskaming assemblage along the Larder Lake-Cadillac fault zone (~2680–2669 Ma) and crystallization of the quartz monzodiorite. These chronological relationships agree with a model of CO2-rich auriferous fluid generation in amphibolite facies rocks of the Pontiac Group and gold deposition in syn- to late-D2 structures in the upper greenschist to amphibolite facies. The variable geometry, rheology, and composition of the various intrusive and sedimentary rocks have provided strain heterogeneities and chemical gradients for the formation of structural and chemical traps that host the gold. The Canadian Malartic deposit corresponds to a mesozonal stockwork-disseminated replacement-type deposit formed within an orogenic setting. The predominance of disseminated replacement ore over fault-fill and extensional quartz-carbonate vein systems suggests that the mineralized fracture networks remained relatively permeable and that fluids circulated at a near-constant hydraulic gradient during the main phase of auriferous hydrothermal alteration.


Eos ◽  
1986 ◽  
Vol 67 (22) ◽  
pp. 497
Author(s):  
Robert W. Embley

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rongqin He ◽  
Zhaofa Zeng ◽  
Xueyu Zhao* ◽  
Wei Du ◽  
Zhijun Huo ◽  
...  

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