Volcanogenic Nickel Deposits With Some Guides For Exploration ? Introduction

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
A. J. Naldrett
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
16
File Size:
684 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1975

Abstract

Over the past six or seven years important new ideas have been developed concerning the origin of nickel sulfide deposits. To a large extent these have been stimulated by the major nickel discoveries of the Eastern Goldfields area of Western Australia (Woodall and Travis, 1969; Ewers and Hudson, 1972). Prior to these finds, the most important nickel camps were regarded as being associated exclusively with intrusive rocks such as the Nickel Irruptive at Sudbury or the intrusive peridotites at Thompson, rocks that were thought to have no close association with volcanism. Study of the Australian discoveries, coupled with work in South Africa (Viljoen and Viljoen, 1969) and Canada (Naldrett and Mason, 1968; Pyke, Naldrett and Eckstrand, 1973), has shown that volcanic rocks with true ultramafic compositions and extrusion temperatures of 1400 to 1600°C were a common feature during the Archean. Under certain circumstances economic concentrations of nickel sulfides have formed from these rocks, either settling to the base of their associated flows or accumulating in shallow intrusive feeders to the flows. The aim of this article is to show how these ultramafic rocks can be recognized, how the nickel deposits, if present, are likely to occur within them, and what special features characterize ore-bearing examples of the rocks.
Citation

APA: A. J. Naldrett  (1975)  Volcanogenic Nickel Deposits With Some Guides For Exploration ? Introduction

MLA: A. J. Naldrett Volcanogenic Nickel Deposits With Some Guides For Exploration ? Introduction. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1975.

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