Plate Tectonics And Mineral Deposits: Some Questions And Answers (6e18ef25-42d0-4ad6-b42b-78284041ca3a)

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 8
- File Size:
- 602 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1978
Abstract
The relationships between mineral deposits and various plate margin mechanisms are examined under the constraints of radiogenic isotopes and other geochemical indicators. It seems like1 y that: (1) deposits of the spreading ridge association are fairly ubiquitious through most of geologic history and can be recognized by the lithologic assemblage and primitive lead isotope ratios; (2) most metals in the island arc association are not derived entirely from a subducting oceanic plate, and have a partly continental affinity; (3) subduction beneath a continental plate generates ores which are derived either from the downgoing plate or from the lower crust; (4) the heating of a continental plate by thickening or by mantle plumes may develop a metallogenic province involving extraction of metals from the curst; (5) rifts and grabens developing thick sections of marine sediments with evaporites may be the locus of base metal mineralization by movement of reducing brine solutions resulting from diagenesis and bacterial reduction of sulfates
Citation
APA:
(1978) Plate Tectonics And Mineral Deposits: Some Questions And Answers (6e18ef25-42d0-4ad6-b42b-78284041ca3a)MLA: Plate Tectonics And Mineral Deposits: Some Questions And Answers (6e18ef25-42d0-4ad6-b42b-78284041ca3a). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1978.