Mississippi Valley-Type Mineralization In Northwestern Ohio: Origin Of The Strontium-Bearing Minerals - Introduction

- Organization:
- Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
- Pages:
- 7
- File Size:
- 528 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1979
Abstract
The isotopic variations of lead from Mississippi Valley galenas have long been used to place constraints on the sources of the lead, and on the residence the of the lead in crustal reservoirs prior to its emplacement in the Mississippi Valley province. Similar studies based on strontium isotope variations in gangue minerals associated with the lead-zinc sulphides have been neglected until Haden's (1) study of such minerals from several localities in northwestern Ohio. His work revealed two things about the mineralization. Firstly, it shoved that the average isotope composition of lead from galenas from northwestern Ohio lies on the anamalous lead line characterizing Mississippi Valley-type leads, albeit at the least radiogenic end of the entire data array. This confirm earlier assignments of the Ohio mineralization as Mississippi Valley-type (Hey1 and others (2)). Secondly, Haden (I) showed that the strontium in the calcite, strontianite and fluorite is broadly similar in isotopic composition to the strontium in the host Silurian to Devonian marine carbonates within which these minerals arc emplaced. He concluded that the mineral strontium my have been very locally derived, from the carbonate hosts.
Citation
APA:
(1979) Mississippi Valley-Type Mineralization In Northwestern Ohio: Origin Of The Strontium-Bearing Minerals - IntroductionMLA: Mississippi Valley-Type Mineralization In Northwestern Ohio: Origin Of The Strontium-Bearing Minerals - Introduction. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1979.