Search for Sediment-hosted Seafloor Polymetallic Sulfides: What Are We Doing Wrong?

- Organization:
- International Marine Minerals Society
- Pages:
- 6
- File Size:
- 99 KB
- Publication Date:
- Aug 24, 2006
Abstract
Various kinds of sediment-hosted polymetallic sulfide deposit are known on land in ancient marine sequences, many tending to be larger and more valuable than massive sulfide deposits genetically associated with volcanic host rocks. Often such deposits are attributed to subhalative or shallow sub-seafloor precipitation processes, and structural control by faulting is commonly evident. Apart from the famous but anomalous Red Sea metallic oozes and several NE Pacific sites (Middle Valley, Escanaba Trough, Guaymas Basin), however, modern analogs of the sediment-hosted polymetallic sulfide category are lacking. Some deposits hosted by volcaniclastic rocks, such as JADE (Okinawa Trough) and Suzette (Eastern Manus Basin) are strictly sediment-hosted, but their formation is associated with the igneous activity and they are better considered a variant of the more abundant volcanic-associated polymetallic sulfide deposits.
Citation
APA:
(2006) Search for Sediment-hosted Seafloor Polymetallic Sulfides: What Are We Doing Wrong?MLA: Search for Sediment-hosted Seafloor Polymetallic Sulfides: What Are We Doing Wrong?. International Marine Minerals Society, 2006.