PACMANUS: An Active Seafloor Hydrothermal Field on Siliceous Volcanic Rocks in the Eastern Manus Basin, Papua New Guinea

The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
J M. Parr S D. Scott J B. Gemmell P M. Herzig
Organization:
The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Pages:
6
File Size:
1012 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1995

Abstract

PACMANUS is an actively-forming seafloor analogue of volcanic-hosted massive sulfide orebodies, situated on the crest of an andesite-dacite-rhyodacite ridge overlying rifted older arc crust in a back-arc basin. Hydrothermal deposits range from Mn-oxide crusts to Cu-Zn-rich massive sulfide mounds and chimneys containing significant Au and Ag. Preliminary data suggest a substantial magmatic component to fluids and metal sources, and we speculate that PACMANUS is the cap to a complete hydrothermal system including subvolcanic and intrusive-related mineralisation.
Citation

APA: J M. Parr S D. Scott J B. Gemmell P M. Herzig  (1995)  PACMANUS: An Active Seafloor Hydrothermal Field on Siliceous Volcanic Rocks in the Eastern Manus Basin, Papua New Guinea

MLA: J M. Parr S D. Scott J B. Gemmell P M. Herzig PACMANUS: An Active Seafloor Hydrothermal Field on Siliceous Volcanic Rocks in the Eastern Manus Basin, Papua New Guinea. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1995.

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