Mamatic Evolution and Exhalative Ores: Evidence from the SW Pacific
    
    - Organization:
 - The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
 - Pages:
 - 5
 - File Size:
 - 185 KB
 - Publication Date:
 - Jan 1, 1987
 
Abstract
The earliest suggestions that some metallic  ore deposits might have resulted from seafloor  volcanic exhalation seem to have been those of  Elie de Beaumont in 1847 and Henry de la Beche  in 1851. In 1885 Tinoco, and Bouglise and  Cumenge, independently investigating-.the manto  copper deposits of the Boleo district of Baja  California, proposed that these had formed on  the seafloor by precipitation from "hydrothermal  submarine emanations". Some twenty years later  the Japanese geologists Kukuchi and Tsujimoto  (1904) put forward the idea that the Kuroko ore- bodies were seafloor volcanic sinter deposits  and in 1919 this was re-affirmed by Ohashi. In  1909 the English geologists Thomas and  MacAllister postulated a similar origin for some of the gold deposits of Mount Morgan in  Queensland. Between the wars the great European economic  geologists Niggli and Schneiderhohn both clearly  recognized a class of seafloor hydrothermal  deposits. The idea rose again immediately after  the Second World War in a very clear statement  by Hegeman in 1948, which was followed by  contributions by Ehrenberg and Kraume and their  co-workers on the submarine volcanic origin of  the Meggen and Rammelsberg orebodies in 1954 and 1955 respectively. In 1955 the present  writer, quite unaware of early or contemporary  work on volcanic exhalative ore deposits,  proposed a volcanic sedimentary/diagenetic  origin for the stratiform base metal ores of SE  Australia. In doing so the writer emphasized  the probable importance of island arc volcanism,  suggested that some "metallogenetic regions" of  ancient terrains were in fact old island arc  systems, that the composition of the ores might  be related to the composition of the associated  volcanic rocks and that such ores would be tied  to volcanic stratigraphy. Ideas on relations between volcanism and  stratiform ore genesis have thus been evolving  over.a period of some 140 years and, beginning  with the observations on Baja California in  1882, work round the rim of the Pacific has  made an important contribution over a period of  more than 100 years.
Citation
APA: (1987) Mamatic Evolution and Exhalative Ores: Evidence from the SW Pacific
MLA: Mamatic Evolution and Exhalative Ores: Evidence from the SW Pacific. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1987.