Geochemistry of the British Caledonides: the setting for metallogeny

The Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining
J. A. Plant P. M. Green P. R. Simpson D. M. A. Flight
Organization:
The Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining
Pages:
12
File Size:
7696 KB
Publication Date:
Jun 19, 1905

Abstract

Paper presented at Mineralisation in the Caledonides, the Mike Gallagher memorial meeting held in Edinburgh, 27-28 June 1996. The British Geological Survey's regional geochemical database is used to identify the patterns associated with the various mineral deposit types and to examine the extent to which their distribution reflects the presence of long-lived metallogenic provinces in the crust. Image analysis provides new insights into the setting of the mineralisation, geochemical constraints on tectonic models of Caledonide evolution and evidence for terrane amalgamation and large-scale processes. There is evidence that much of the mineralisation reflects the presence of long-lived provinces with a distinctive geochemistry reflecting their origins as zones of crustal extension. In the case of the Middle-Upper Dalradiam sedex deposits, the relationship between geochemistry and tectonic setting is direct. In other cases, rocks deposited in extensional zones appear to have acted as reservoirs of ore-forming elements which were further concentrated during later events
Citation

APA: J. A. Plant P. M. Green P. R. Simpson D. M. A. Flight  (1905)  Geochemistry of the British Caledonides: the setting for metallogeny

MLA: J. A. Plant P. M. Green P. R. Simpson D. M. A. Flight Geochemistry of the British Caledonides: the setting for metallogeny. The Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining, 1905.

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