scholarly journals New gravity data for the Bathurst Mining Camp, northeastern New Brunswick: a colour-shaded map of the 1st vertical derivative of the Bouguer gravity anomaly with geological contacts and faults, and locations of selected volcanogenic massive sulphide deposits

2007 ◽  
Author(s):  
R Morris ◽  
D M Jobin ◽  
M D Thomas ◽  
N Rogers ◽  
S R McCutcheon
2019 ◽  
Vol 56 (5) ◽  
pp. 569-583 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gilles Bellefleur ◽  
Saeid Cheraghi ◽  
Alireza Malehmir

We reprocessed legacy three-dimensional (3D) seismic data from the Halfmile Lake and Brunswick areas, both of which were acquired for mineral exploration in the Bathurst Mining Camp, New Brunswick. Each 3D seismic survey was acquired over known volcanogenic massive sulphide deposits and covered areas with strong mineral potential. Most improvements resulted from a reduction of coherent and random noise on prestack gathers and from an improved velocity model, combined with re-imaging with dip moveout corrections and poststack migration or prestack time migration. At Halfmile Lake, the new imaging results show the Deep zone and a possible extension of the sulphide mineralization at greater depth. True amplitude processing has shown that this anomaly has strong amplitudes and is offset from the Deep zone by a shallowly dipping fault (<15°). With the clearer geological context provided by our results, this anomaly, which appears as a stand-alone anomaly on an original image obtained by Noranda Exploration Ltd., becomes a defendable exploration target. Nonorthogonal acquisition geometry and receiver patches of the Brunswick No. 6 3D seismic survey generated artefacts after dip moveout processing that reduced the overall quality of the seismic volumes. By using a filtering approach based on the application of a weighted Laplacian-Gaussian filter in the Kx–Ky domain, we reduced the noise and improved the continuity of reflections. We also imaged the short and flat reflections observed previously only in the shallow part of prestack time migrated data. These short reflections appear as diffractions on the filtered stacked section with dip moveout corrections, indicating that they originate from small geological bodies or discontinuities in the subsurface.


1975 ◽  
Vol 12 (4) ◽  
pp. 539-557 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. L. Cumming ◽  
N. N. Chandra

The correlation between Bouguer gravity anomaly and depth to the 'Riel' reflecting horizon established in southern Alberta in the region around 113 °longitude and 51 °latitude is not substantiated on a smaller gravity anomaly further to the south. Only small variations in depth to the 'Riel' reflecting horizon occur and these do not correlate well with the gravity data. The reflecting horizons are continuous over distances of only a few kilometres. Model calculations of the reflecting zones based on an analysis of the variations in power spectra of the reflections indicate substantial changes in the layered reflecting zones over distances of the order of a few hundred metres. Some attempts at deconvolving the seismic data confirm that the prominent reflections are caused by rapid variations in reflection coefficients indicating finely layered zones a few hundred metres thick.


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