An Understanding of Regolith and Landscape Evolution as an Aid to Mineral Exploration - The Charters Towers Experience

The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Eggleton R. A Orr T van Eck M Taylor G
Organization:
The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Pages:
6
File Size:
143 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1997

Abstract

The Charters Towers locality has been a historically renowned gold producing region and discovery of new ore deposits during the past decade have renewed exploration interests in the area. Further mineral exploration with conventional techniques is hindered by the presence of Cainozoic sedimentary deposits and volcanic flows overlying a major portion of the basement geology. Mineral exploration thus warrants new, innovative and cost-effective methods to probe beneath the Cainozoic cover in an attempt to discover new orebodies. There is growing awareness of the role of weathering as an agent of chemical dispersion into the cover sediments as well as a producer of supergene deposits in tectonically stable cratons (Butt and Zeegers, 1992). Consequently, landscape evolution coupled with regolith geochemistry is one of the methods increasingly being used to identify relevant sampling media to explore beneath weathered cover sediments and deeply weathered bedrock terrain (Anand, 1993). The aim of this paper is to describe and elucidate the regolith - landscape features of the region and combine geochemistry to assess the pertinence of the same on mineral exploration strategies in the Charters Towers area.
Citation

APA: Eggleton R. A Orr T van Eck M Taylor G  (1997)  An Understanding of Regolith and Landscape Evolution as an Aid to Mineral Exploration - The Charters Towers Experience

MLA: Eggleton R. A Orr T van Eck M Taylor G An Understanding of Regolith and Landscape Evolution as an Aid to Mineral Exploration - The Charters Towers Experience. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1997.

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