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Geochemistry of Critical Minerals in Mine Wastes at Hillsboro and Steeple Rock Districts, New Mexico - SME Annual Meeting 2024By Virginia T. McLemore, Abena S. Acheampong-Mensah
Critical mineral endowment of mine wastes in two mining districts in New Mexico (Copper Flat at Hillsboro and Carlisle-Center mines in the Steeple Rock district) will be characterized and estimated. “
Feb 1, 2024
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Geochemistry of Critical Minerals in Mine Wastes in New Mexico - SME Annual Meeting 2024By Evan J. Owen, Virginia T. McLemore
There are tens of thousands of inactive mine features in 274 mining districts in New Mexico (including coal, uranium, metals, and industrial minerals districts). However, many of these mines have not
Feb 1, 2024
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Geochemistry of Croisilles and Patuki Metavolcanics, New Zealand: Implication for Early Permian Subduction PolarityKey incompatible element ratios for metabasalts from the Early Permian Croisilles and Patuki Volcanics, South Island, New Zealand, provide constraints on the tectonic environment in which their pr
Jan 1, 1987
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Geochemistry Of Deep-Sea Manganese NodulesBy Walter E. Dean
Deep-sea manganese nodules are considered to be potential ores of manganese, nickel, cobalt, and copper. Considerable time, effort, and funds have been applied to the study of Se distribution of nodul
Jan 1, 1982
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Geochemistry of Deep-Sea Manganese Nodules-Organic InvolvementBy Walter E. Dean
Deep-sea manganese nodules are considered to be potential ores of manganese, nickel, cobalt, and copper. Considerable time, effort, and funds have been applied to the study of the distribution of nodu
Jan 1, 1983
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Geochemistry Of Epithermal Precious Metal DepositsBy Samuel B. Romberger
During the formation of most epithermal precious metal deposits geochemical changes can be characterized by the introduction of large amounts of silica, minor amounts of sulfur, and trace quantities o
Jan 1, 1990
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Geochemistry Of Fluids From Southern Kermadec Frontal Arc Hydrothermal SystemsBy Gary J. Massoth
Are hydrothermal emissions from subduction-related volcanic arcs important to the total hydrothermal burden of the oceans? While historical observations of hydrothermal venting of fluids at mid-ocean
Jan 1, 2001
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Geochemistry of Groundwaters in the Vicinity of Stawell, Clunes, Ararat and Ballarat Gold DepositsThe relative contents of Au in a series of groundwaters from water bores and exploration drillholes, located near Au mineralisation at Stawell, Ararat, Clunes and Ballarat in central Victoria, were
Jan 1, 1997
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Geochemistry of ilmenite and applications to ilmenite provenance and Ti-mineral explorationBy Antonio Pineda, Roger K. McLimans, Felicity E. Lloyd
lmenite is a primary ore feed to the DuPont chloride process for the manufacture of titanium diox-ide pigment. We seek to determine ilmenite geochemistry as a function of original source and as-certai
Jan 1, 2005
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Geochemistry of ilmenites in heavy mineral sand deposits from Southwestern India: A source to beach case studyBy Felicity Lloyd, Stuart Kearns, Roger McLimans
The metamorphic terrane of southwestern India is a geological environment containing ilmenite source-rocks, transport drainage systems, and resultant beach sand deposits that contain altered ilmenites
Jan 1, 2005
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Geochemistry of Komatiites in the Abitibi Greenstone Belt and Implications for Their Mineralization PotentialBy R. A. Sproule
Abitibi Greenstone Belt ? ~2.745 to 2.680 Ga (U-Pb zircon ages) ? Several lithologically-distinct and structurally repeated(?) assemblages ? Represents: ? Allochthonous terranes? ? Single autoch
May 1, 2003
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Geochemistry Of Massive Sulfide-Associated Hydrothermal Exhalative Sediments, Bathurst, New BrunswickBy Jan M. Peter
Many of the Pb-Zn massive sulfide deposits of the Bathurst area in northern New Brunswick, Canada, are intimately associated with laterally continuous iron formation (IF) (Figure 1). This IF is a foss
Jan 1, 1993
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Geochemistry of Mercury and Origins of Natural Contamination of the EnvironmentBy I. R. Jonasson, R. W. Boyle
"Current interest in the distribution of mercury in the natural environment comes from quite different, though not unrelated, sources. Mercury has long been an important metal in many industries and h
Jan 1, 1972
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Geochemistry of Mesozoic Hydrothermal Alteration of Black Shales Associated With Mercur-Type Gold DepositsBy Paula N. Wilson, W. T. Parry
Carbonaceous and metalliferous black shales occur in close proximity to Mercur-type gold deposits in the southern Oquirrh Mountains, Utah. These shale units, the Manning Canyon shale and the Long Trai
Jan 1, 1990
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Geochemistry of Molybdenum-Bearing Granodiorite Porphyries in West Nelson, with Special Reference to Elliot CK, Karamea Bend and Taipo SpurBy S D. C Rabone
An elongate belt containing granodiorite stocks with associated stockwork molybdenum mineralisation in west Nelson is correlated with the I-type Separation Point Suite of mid Cretaceous age. Trace ele
Jan 1, 1987
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Geochemistry Of Polymetallic Veins And Associated Wall Rock Alteration, Pyramid District, NevadaBy Andy B. Wallace
Veins in the Pyramid district of northwestern Nevada occur along steep fractures in Oligocene and Miocene quartz latite tuffs. The vein mineralization is zoned from a central enargite-pyrite zone outw
Jan 1, 1978
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Geochemistry of Polymetallic Veins and Associated Wall Rock Alteration, Pyramid District, Washoe County, NevadaBy Andy B. Wallace
Veins in the Pyramid district of northwestern Nevada occur along steep fractures in Oligocene and Miocene quartz latite tuffs. The vein mineralization is zoned from a central enargite-pyrite zone outw
Jan 1, 1981
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Geochemistry Of Rare Earth Elements In Hydrothermal SedimentsBy Robert M. Owen
The rare earth elements (REE1s; atomic number 57 -71) exhibit a coherent chemistry, are widespread in nature, and tend to occur in characteristic concentrations in different geochemical phases. Becaus
Jan 1, 1989
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Geochemistry of Tailings and Seepage from Three Tailings Storage Facilities in Australia - Uncapped, Capped and Active TailingsBy T Baumgartl, D Bradshaw, B Forsyth, M Edraki
In a tailings storage facility, the chemistry of pore water is a function of oxidation and dissolution of sulfide minerals, containing metals and metalloids, the neutralising effect of gangue minerals
Jul 10, 2012
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Geochemistry of the British Caledonides: the setting for metallogenyBy D. M. A. Flight, P. M. Green, J. A. Plant, P. R. Simpson
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 i
Jun 19, 1905