The Radio Hill Ni-Cu Deposit and the Mt Scholl-Munni Munni Mafic-Ultramafic Metallogenic Province: A Case of Integrated Exploration Technique
    
    - Organization:
 - The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
 - Pages:
 - 7
 - File Size:
 - 570 KB
 - Publication Date:
 - Jan 1, 1988
 
Abstract
The Archean geological sequence in the West  Pilbara region (Fig 1), a deformed greenstone  volcano-sedimentary succession regionally  intruded by layered mafic/ultramafic  lopoliths, batholithic granites, granite  stocks and transected by swarms of dolerite  dykes, has prompted several companies to  search for a variety of base metals and and platinoids (Fig 2). In the first instance, detailed aeromagnetic  surveying was completed, producing patterns of  marked magnetic anomalism which proved  substantially successful in the demarcation of  areas warranting geological reconnaissance and  detailed follow-up. Revelant to this paper were the obvious  magnetic features overlying outcropping and  buried mafic/ultramafic bodies which  ultimately were proven to be host to Ni-Cu  sulphides, pgm, Ti, V, Cr and, more recently,  Ag and Au mineralisation. Routine stream sediment, soil sampling and  ground geophysical techniques of the day  appear, in most cases, to have been adequate  in the detection of mineralisation, except in  the case of Radio Hill massive sulphides where  the Turam E.M. (1972) signal essentially  failed to detect the blind conductor (Peters,  de Angelis 1987).
Citation
APA: (1988) The Radio Hill Ni-Cu Deposit and the Mt Scholl-Munni Munni Mafic-Ultramafic Metallogenic Province: A Case of Integrated Exploration Technique
MLA: The Radio Hill Ni-Cu Deposit and the Mt Scholl-Munni Munni Mafic-Ultramafic Metallogenic Province: A Case of Integrated Exploration Technique. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1988.