Basement Control Of Geologic Phenomena In Tennessee -An Hypothesis

- Organization:
- Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
- Pages:
- 12
- File Size:
- 533 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1977
Abstract
A major problem in future discoveries of base metals is their "explorability". By this I mean an exploration program must be designed that assures accurate assessment of the potential for ore, but is within reasonable budgetary constraints. As we are compelled to depend more and more on non-outcropping prospects, "blind" deposits, and as drilling costs multiply, the costs of exploration increase significantly. Solutions to the problem of defining exploration targets are influenced by our conceptions of the origin and recognition o f conditions that localize ore. The maxim that "elephants should be sought in elephant country" presumes we can recognize elephant country. This paper presents a suggested origin for some mineral deposits, and their controls; particularly those termed ?Mississippi Valley type". Tennessee is used as an example of the ideas offered. Mining districts designated "Mississippi Valley type" are, and have long been, the principal sources of barite, fluorite, lead and zinc ores in the United States and elsewhere throughout the world. A large volume of literature is available describing this class of ore deposits, explaining their habitat, and invoking genetic models for them. The quality of this literature is notably uneven, some of it demonstrably erroneous, and much of it is restricted to detailed descriptions of one aspect of the problem, or to detailed descriptions of one aspect of the problem, or to a single mine, or even a single stope. If an ore deposit is thought
Citation
APA:
(1977) Basement Control Of Geologic Phenomena In Tennessee -An HypothesisMLA: Basement Control Of Geologic Phenomena In Tennessee -An Hypothesis. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1977.