Footwall Mineralization In The Osceola Amygdaloid Michigan Native Copper District

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
R. J. Weege
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
21
File Size:
2403 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1962

Abstract

Conventional underground mapping methods and diamond drilling are being applied in a study to determine the nature of the copper ore occurrences near the footwall of the Osceola lava flow top, commonly referred to as the Osceola Amygdaloid. Our work to date suggests that structures formed by relatively impermeable barriers, created by flowage and injection of still-molten lava from the interior of the flow into the solidified, brecciated crust, acted as the ore receptacles. Ascending hydrothermal fluids traveling near the footwall contact were trapped and confined in these barriers which retarded the direct upward movement of the ore fluids and caused deposition of copper. Oreshoots located near the footwall appear to have been formed spatially' independently from the hanging-wall oreshoots by fluids traveling simultaneously, but along different channelways. The barrier concept as advanced by earlier writers to explain the concentration of the ore-bearing, fluids into broad shoots con¬stituting entire ore bodies is found to be equally as applicable for the localization of smaller oreshoots within the Osceola ore body.
Citation

APA: R. J. Weege  (1962)  Footwall Mineralization In The Osceola Amygdaloid Michigan Native Copper District

MLA: R. J. Weege Footwall Mineralization In The Osceola Amygdaloid Michigan Native Copper District. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1962.

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