Biogeographical/Geobotanical and Biogeochemical Investigations Connected with Exploration for Nickel-Copper Ores in the Hot, Wet Summer/Dry Winter Savanna Woodland Environment

The Southern African Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Monica M. Cole
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The Southern African Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
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11
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Abstract

The Empress nickel/copper deposit west of Gatooma in Rhodesia occurs within gabbro and amphibolite, disposed at the contact of a granodiorite stock (Barebottom Hill) and the surrounding greenstones of the Archaen Bulawayan System. The orebody has a pipelike form and a poor surface expression due to plantation of the area by Miocene (Africa) and later Victoria Falls erosion cycles. Barebottom Hill represents a monadnock remnant in the geomorphological surfaces while traces of the once larger Empress orebody have been removed. Limitations in soil geochemistry necessitated both studies of the vegetation ecology and the biogeochemistry of the area, both of which were anomalous. The use of geobotany was found to be restricted but biogeochemistry offers a most effective prospecting tool and was found to define the sub-outcrop of the ore-body more precisely than soil geochemistry since these methods reflect and differentiate anomalies emanating from bedrock mineralisation and those due to surface phenomena.
Citation

APA: Monica M. Cole  Biogeographical/Geobotanical and Biogeochemical Investigations Connected with Exploration for Nickel-Copper Ores in the Hot, Wet Summer/Dry Winter Savanna Woodland Environment

MLA: Monica M. Cole Biogeographical/Geobotanical and Biogeochemical Investigations Connected with Exploration for Nickel-Copper Ores in the Hot, Wet Summer/Dry Winter Savanna Woodland Environment. The Southern African Institute of Mining and Metallurgy,

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