On The Mechanism Of The Deposition Of Certain Metalliferous Lode Systems Associated With Granitic Batholiths

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 23
- File Size:
- 982 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1933
Abstract
INTRODUCTION THE deposition of metalliferous lode systems takes place at considerable depths and no one may observe the process. We see only the end results of the process and from these we seek to construct a theory that will account for them. Because there is an obvious relation between many lode systems and intrusive igneous masses, it is a natural inference that they have formed by fluids that were expelled from such masses. The metalliferous lode systems have been deposited by ascending thermal fluids that have risen mainly from great irregular bodies of intruding magmas which are called batholiths. Probably 95 per cent of such lode systems have formed in connection with acidic or "granitic" batholiths and probably less than 5 per cent have formed in connection with basic intrusives. The study of lode ores, therefore, should include the study of the intrusion and differentiation of the batholith. It was noted long ago1 that certain tin-bearing deposits are commonly associated with small stocks. That small stocks are cupolas of larger intrusive masses has generally been recognized. Butler,2 in his studies of the ore deposits of Utah, showed that the chief deposits in Utah are in and near the stocks; that is near the "apically truncated
Citation
APA:
(1933) On The Mechanism Of The Deposition Of Certain Metalliferous Lode Systems Associated With Granitic BatholithsMLA: On The Mechanism Of The Deposition Of Certain Metalliferous Lode Systems Associated With Granitic Batholiths. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1933.