Exploration For Ore-Concentrating Cobalt-Manganese Deposits In The Magellan Seamounts, Pacific Ocean

- Organization:
- International Marine Minerals Society
- Pages:
- 2
- File Size:
- 21 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 2004
Abstract
According to geochemical specialization, cobalt-manganese crusts (CMC) of the Magellan Seamounts are rich in cobalt and manganese and are complex in composition. Besides cobalt, manganese, and nickel, they contain such components, as platinum, copper, molybdenum, and rare earth elements, which enhance the value of this material. Factors and conditions responsible for Co-Mn ore-genesis and processes of cobalt-manganese crust formation are described in a number of Russian and foreign geological papers. The study of ore-concentrating processes in the Magellan Seamounts helped to solve an important applied problem, namely to reduce the time needed to reveal the factors of CMC formation mechanism. The authors of this research found seawater over the described area of Magellan Seamounts to be stratified and to contain high concentrations of manganese, iron, cobalt, nickel, copper, lead, and zinc. Diagrams of suspended Co, Mn, Ni, and other components in seawater (0-5500 m), as well as medium concentrations of basic elements (Co, Mn, and Ni) in ore deposits of metallogenic levels of Magellan Seamounts, were found to coincide both on guyots and abyssal plains. Detailed geological study of guyots in the Magellan Seamounts (Dalmorgeo, IOAN, Roskomnedra, and others) revealed that medium Co-Mn crusts cover bedrock rocks in narrow ribbon-like bodies along the edges of bathymetric intervals 1300-1600 m, 1400-2000 m, 2000-2500 m, and 2500-3000 m.
Citation
APA:
(2004) Exploration For Ore-Concentrating Cobalt-Manganese Deposits In The Magellan Seamounts, Pacific OceanMLA: Exploration For Ore-Concentrating Cobalt-Manganese Deposits In The Magellan Seamounts, Pacific Ocean. International Marine Minerals Society, 2004.