Barite-Gold And Associated Ferruginous Deposits At Franklin Seamount, Woodlark Basin: A Potential Exploration Target In Ancient Volcanic Sequences

- Organization:
- International Marine Minerals Society
- Pages:
- 4
- File Size:
- 662 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1993
Abstract
In the western Woodlark Basin, propagation of seafloor spreading is occurring directly into the continental crust of Papua new Guinea. The spreading is not strictly in a back-arc tectonic setting, rather it appears associated with microplate rotations related to the complex convergence of the Indo-Australian and Pacific plates in the southeastern Pacific region. Volcanic rocks along the western Woodlark spreading axis range from normal mid- ocean ridge basalts to basaltic andesites with back-arc geochemical affinities. Rare peralkaline rhyolites also occur. Hydrothermal deposits occur at a basaltic andesite volcano located on the neovolcanic zone near its westernmost propagating tip. Franklin Seamount is a 250m-high cone constructed largely of pillow lavas and talus which sits astride a 450m-high ridge of similar lavas oriented subnormal to the spreading direction. At its crest, 2150m below sea level, there is a 100m-deep caldera.
Citation
APA: (1993) Barite-Gold And Associated Ferruginous Deposits At Franklin Seamount, Woodlark Basin: A Potential Exploration Target In Ancient Volcanic Sequences
MLA: Barite-Gold And Associated Ferruginous Deposits At Franklin Seamount, Woodlark Basin: A Potential Exploration Target In Ancient Volcanic Sequences. International Marine Minerals Society, 1993.