Geology - Paper No. 5 The Pyroxene Granulites And Associated Gabbros Of The Fraser Range, Western Range, Western Australia And Their Economic Significance

- Organization:
- The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 25
- File Size:
- 1142 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1969
Abstract
The Fraser Range is composed dominantly of basic pyroxene granulites derived from basalts, many of which appear to have been vesicular and*pillowed. Acidic and basic garnet-bearing granulites are important in the west, and acidic granulites and narrow anortho- site layers are dominant in some regions east of the Fraser Range. An extensive flat-lying olivine gabbro sheet cuts the granulites, and in places has been converted to spinel-bearing meta-gabbros and pyroxene granulites. The granulites of the Fraser Range (Proterozoic) are separated from the gneisses and schists of the Goldfields regions (Archaean) by the Fraser Fault, over which there is a large gravity anomaly (gradient 20 milligals per mile). Some of the problems associated with the concentration of Cu, Ni, etc. liberated from mineral lattices during metamorphism, and other principles of metal concentration in granulite terranes, are discussed. The recognition of vesicular and pillowed zones, even though highly metamorphosed, is of fundamental importance.
Citation
APA: (1969) Geology - Paper No. 5 The Pyroxene Granulites And Associated Gabbros Of The Fraser Range, Western Range, Western Australia And Their Economic Significance
MLA: Geology - Paper No. 5 The Pyroxene Granulites And Associated Gabbros Of The Fraser Range, Western Range, Western Australia And Their Economic Significance. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1969.