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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Ore Petrology and Wallrock Alteration Studies at the Lake Shore Gold Mine, Kirkland Lake, Ontario

McInnes, Brent Ian 04 1900 (has links)
<p> The Lake Shore Mine has accounted for over a quarter of the gold produced in the Kirkland Lake camp. Petrography suggests that gold is a later phase in the paragenesis of ore minerals. Sulphides precipitated first followed by tellurides and gold. Wallrock alteration adjacent to the quartz veins was studied by thin section and geochemical analysis. Petrography enabled an alteration facies scheme based on predominant alteration minerals to be established. The alteration assemblages suggest the fluid had a high K and CO2 content, low Na, and reduced S content. Geochemical analysis of these samples confirm petrographic observations and suggests major additions of K2O, SiO2, Rb, Sb and Au to the wallrock, and losses of Na2O, Ba and Zr from the wallrock.</p> / Thesis / Bachelor of Science (BSc)
2

Studies of the Mechanics and Structure of Shallow Magmatic Plumbing Systems

Díez, Mikel 04 April 2008 (has links)
Volcanic activity, and the resultant deposits and structures at the Earth's surface, are the outcome of the inner workings of underground magmatic plumbing systems. These systems, essentially, consist of magma reservoirs which supply magma to the surface through volcanic conduits feeding volcanic eruptions. The mechanics and structure of plumbing systems remain largely unknown due to the obvious challenges involved in inferring volcanic processes occurring underground from observations at the surface. Nevertheless, volcanologists are beginning to gain a deeper understanding of the workings and architecture of magmatic plumbing systems from geophysical observations on active volcanoes, as well as from geological studies of the erosional remnants of ancient volcanic systems. In this work, I explore the relationship between the structure and mechanics of shallow plumbing systems and the volcanic eruptions these systems produce. I attempt to contribute to the understanding of this complex relationship by linking geological and geophysical observations of an eroded basaltic subvolcanic system, and the eruptive and tectonic activity of an active volcano, with mathematical models of magma ascent and stress transfer. The remarkable exposures of the Carmel outcrop intrusions, near the San Rafael swell, southeast Utah, U. S. A., allow detailed geological and geophysical observations of the roots of volcanic conduits that emerge from a subhorizontal magma feeder reservoir. These observations reveal a new mechanism for magma ascent and eruption triggering through gravitational instabilities created from an underlying feeding sill, and shed light on the mechanics of sill emplacement. Geophysical and geological observations of the 1999 and xii 1992 eruptions of the Cerro Negro volcano, Nicaragua, are used to explore the coupling between changes in the stress field and the triggering of volcanic eruptions, and magma ascent through the shallow crust. Modeling results of stress transfer and conduit flow highlight the importance of the surrounding stress field and geometry of the volcanic conduits that comprise shallow plumbing systems.

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