Comments on "The Estimation of Mineralized Veins: A Comparative Study of Direct and Indirect Approaches," by D. Marcotte and A. Boucher (29826150-91f9-4471-af0d-9edee6fe0c32)

- Organization:
- Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
- Pages:
- 5
- File Size:
- 27 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 2001
Abstract
"In their paper, Marcotte and Boucher (2001) cast some new light on the old problem of 2D estimation of vein-type deposits with thickness and grade of intercepts. Using a theoretical approach, some extensive simulation experiments and the Walker Lake data, they show that the direct approach (interpolation of grade at points on a regular grid) gives better estimates of the true grade at those points than the indirect approach (interpolation of grade x thickness or accumulation and interpolation of thickness) when there is some positive correlation between grade and thickness and that this better performance increases with the correlation of grade and thickness as well as the variability of both variables.We would like to bring some reservations to that conclusion by showing that even if direct point grade estimates are better than indirect ones, it is not necessarily true for block estimates and in particular for the estimated grade of the whole orebody itself."
Citation
APA:
(2001) Comments on "The Estimation of Mineralized Veins: A Comparative Study of Direct and Indirect Approaches," by D. Marcotte and A. Boucher (29826150-91f9-4471-af0d-9edee6fe0c32)MLA: Comments on "The Estimation of Mineralized Veins: A Comparative Study of Direct and Indirect Approaches," by D. Marcotte and A. Boucher (29826150-91f9-4471-af0d-9edee6fe0c32). Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 2001.