Alpine-Mediterranean Copper Deposits In Relation To Plate Tectonics

- Organization:
- Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
- Pages:
- 25
- File Size:
- 758 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1973
Abstract
The Alpine-Himalayan system, the only major active tectonic belt mainly exposed in a continental mass, is of increasing interest to exploration geologists as well as to theoreticians. Answers to the broader problems of plate tectonics are being sought in this intricate system where the geosynclinal concept was born and where the geotectonic cycle was first applied to metallogeny. The search is all the more intense because it involves scientists from more than a dozen countries with a stimulating variety in perspective. The international Geodynamics Project has allocated the Alpine-Himalayan system to two separate study groups with one directing its attention to the Alpine-Mediterranean region and the other giving consideration to the Himalayan region. This geographic division is accepted in this paper, with remarks being confined to the former and to the west of boundary zone between the European-Asian and the Southeast Asian plates as envisioned by Dewey and Bird (1970). The region is well-mapped in some parts and it includes some of the most intensely-studied geology, most classic mines, and newest orebody discoveries. Within the region, an Alpine-age copper-molybdenum metallogenic belt extends from Rumania to Pakistan. The belt can be considered in terms of plate tectonics, and there is the possibility of using plate tectonics concepts in exploration.
Citation
APA:
(1973) Alpine-Mediterranean Copper Deposits In Relation To Plate TectonicsMLA: Alpine-Mediterranean Copper Deposits In Relation To Plate Tectonics. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1973.