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Hydrogenetic Fe-Mn Crusts From The Atlantic And Pacific Oceans: Geological Evolution And Conditions Of FormationBy Irina A. Pulyaeva
Hydrogenetic Fe-Mn crusts are ubiquitous in the ocean basins and play an important role in marine mineral-deposit research because of their widespread occurrence and high concentrations of valuable an
Jan 1, 2011
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Gold Mineralization In The Marine Environment; A Possible Marine Mineral Exploration And Mining TargetBy Thomas Pichler
In the past marine mining technology has focused on bulk mining of base metals from polymetallic massive sulfides. This has not been very successful because of the relatively low unit value of these m
Jan 1, 1993
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HUGIN AUV ? Concept And Operational Experiences To DateBy Karstein Vestgard
During the last few years autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV) technology has evolved from concept demonstrators towards commercial products. The driving forces are the move for energy exploitation tow
Jan 1, 2003
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Chile's Tierra Del Fuego: A Southern Equivalent Of Nome, Alaska?By Richard H. T. Garnett
The Chilean part of the archipelago of Tierra del Fuego, situated south of latitude 62o S, is within that country?s Región de Magallanes y Antártica, and separated from the remainder of Chile by the M
Sep 14, 2011
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Sediment Geochemistry Associated with Polymetallic Nodules in the Central Mexican PacificThe chemical composition of the nodules varies with the type of manganese minerals and the size and characteristics of their nucleus, but those who have an economic interest have the following composi
Sep 14, 2011
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Computer Applications In Marine Mineral ExplorationBy Robert M. Owen
Recent advances in coring technology and in the development of shipboard and/or in situ geochemical geochemical analysis systems have greatly improved our ability to collect and analyze exploration sa
Jan 1, 1991
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An Economic Assessment Of The Long-Term Future Of Mining Deep-Sea FerromanganeseBy Andrew G. Hudson
The long-term economics of each of the four principal metals in marine manganese nodules (copper, nickel, cobalt and manganese) was evaluated to determine the anticipated viability of a nodule mining
Jan 1, 1996
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Potential Offshore Aggregate, Gulf Of MexicoBy S. Jeffress Williams
The topic area for this paper covers the United States portion of the northern Gulf of Mexico, extending from the Rio Grande delta east to the Florida peninsula. Declaration of an Exclusive Economic Z
Jan 1, 1986
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Application Of High Resolution Element Analysis Of N-E Pacific SedimentsBy In Kwon Um
The XRF Core-Scanner system performs non-destructive analysis of elements from Mg to U, in concentrations of ppm levels on split cores with digital images. Using the AVAATECH XRF Corescanner system, w
Jan 1, 2011
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A Particle Size Distribution Model To Predict The Fate Of Resuspended Sediment In The Development Of Deep-Sea Mineral ResourcesBy Du Gon Lee
This study presents a model to predict fate of resuspended sediment in the development of deep-sea mineral resources including manganese nodules under Clarion-Clipperton area of the Pacific Ocean. The
Jan 1, 2003
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An Exotic Au- And Ag-Enriched Massive Sulfide Deposit From Mt. Jourdanne, Southwest Indian Ridge ? Composition And Genetic ImplicationsBy P. Halbach
Hydrothermal activity is well known from many locations on most mid-ocean ridges, but no hydrothermally mineralized area had yet been found at the ultraslow spreading southwest Indian Ridge up to Octo
Jan 1, 2002
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Sediment Sources, Pathways And Sinks In The Southern North Sea And Eastern English ChannelBy Brian D?Olier
Much of the aggregate that is being exploited at present from these areas is a ?relic? deposit. It was originally eroded from primary source rocks and transported to a depositional centre by processes
Jan 1, 2004
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Uncommon Au- And Ag-Enriched Sulfidic Mineral Assemblages From A Basaltic Spreading Ridge Environment: Mt. Jourdanne, Southwest Indian RidgeBy Peter Halbach
Hydrothermal activity is well known from many locations on most mid-ocean ridges, however no hydrothermally mineralized area had yet been found at the ultraslow spreading southwest Indian Ridge up to
Jan 1, 2001
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Gas Hydrates Of The West Coast Of India ? A Neo-Tectonic PerspectiveBy S. Rajendran
Gas Hydrates (Methane Hydrates) are solid, ice-like substances composed of water and natural gas. They occur naturally in areas of the world where methane and water combine at appropriate conditions o
Jan 1, 2005
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Real-Time Monitoring Of Marine Tailings Placement In Papua New GuineaBy Wilfred Lus
Meaningful and real time environmental monitoring of marine tailings placement is a clear sign of deeper commitment to the people of PNG in regard to impacts of mining on coastal environment and marin
Jan 1, 2001
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Marine Mineral Image-Text DatabaseBy Lu Jun
Up to now, much data on marine minerals, as well as on marine geochemistry, have been accumulated. Modem computer databases provide optimum flexibility and power for manipulating these data. The best
Jan 1, 1994
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Application Of Ferromanganese Marine Mineral Tailings In Concrete And CeramicsBy J. C. Wiltshire
Both ferromanganese crusts and nodules present potential processors with enormous volumes of tailings of dubious environmental character: most processing scenarios fail to utilize the uneconomic manga
Jan 1, 1991
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Preliminary Economic Evaluation of Deep-sea REE Mud MiningBy Tetsuo Yamazaki
Deep-sea rare-earth element-rich mud (REE Mud) distributes in pelagic clayey sediment column on ocean seafloor at 4,000-6,000 m deep. The thickness ranges 5-80 m and the burial depth 0-100 m. The REE
Sep 14, 2011
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Gas Hydrate, Methanogenic Calcite, And 13C-Depleted Bivalve Shells From A Mud Volcano Offshore Los Angeles, CaliforniaBy James R. Hein
Methane and hydrogen sulfide vent from a cold seep above a shallowly buried methane hydrate in a mud volcano located 24 km offshore of Los Angeles, California in 800 m water. Bivalves, authigenic cal
Jan 1, 2005
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Massive Sulfide Deposits, Southern Juan De Fuca RidgeBy Willam R. Normark
During a series of dives with the submersible ALVIN in 1984, samples of massive sulfide were recovered from four vent sites. All sites occur within a linear, steep-walled cleft about 50 m wide and as
Jan 1, 1985