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The Spatial and Temporal Distribution of the Metal Mineralisation in Eastern Australia and the Relationship of the Observed Patterns to Giant Ore Deposits

Robinson, Larry J. (2007-08-16). The Spatial and Temporal Distribution of the Metal Mineralisation in Eastern Australia and the Relationship of the Observed Patterns to Giant Ore Deposits PhD Thesis, School of Earth Sciences, The University of Queensland.

Document type: Thesis
Collection: Open access collection of UQ Honours, Masters and PhD Theses  
 
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Name Description MIMEType Size Downloads
Brandt_1993_.mpg (stream)   Brandt_1993_.mpg video/mpeg 468.89KB 123
Machetel_2003.mpeg (stream)   Machetel_2003.mpeg video/mpeg 3.67MB 81
Powerpoint_6_1.pdf   Powerpoint 6.1: The Golden Network in the Trunkey Creek-Ophir Region NSW, Australia application/pdf 2.31MB 201
Powerpoint_6_10.pdf   Powerpoint 6.10: Meso-Scale Patterns in Gravity Data for Eastern Australia and Their Relationship to Fossil Impact Craters application/pdf 3.06MB 180
Powerpoint_6_11.pdf   Powepoint 6.11: Macro-Scale Patterns in Eastern Australia using Binary Slices of Gravity Data application/pdf 6.28MB 247
Powerpoint_6_2.pdf   Powerpoint 6.2: Spatial Patterns in Gold Deposits for Southeastern Australia application/pdf 4.56MB 206
Powerpoint_6_3.pdf   Powerpoint 6.3: Spatial Patterns of Gold Deposits in the Gundagai Region, New South Wales, Australia application/pdf 23.59MB 34
Powerpoint_6_4.pdf   Powerpoint 6.4: Spatial Patterns in the Gold Deposits of Nevada, U.S.A. application/pdf 1.81MB 368
Powerpoint_6_5.pdf   Powerpoint 6.5: Spatial Patterns in Gold Deposits for the Bendigo-Ballarat Region Victoria, Australia application/pdf 8.84MB 284
Powerpoint_6_5_version2.pdf   Powerpoint 6-5 v. 2 - Spatial Patterns of Gold Deposits, Bendigo-Ballarat Region, Victoria, Australia application/pdf 8.15MB 86
Powerpoint_6_6.pdf   Powerpoint 6.6: Spatial Patterns of Mineral Deposits in the Broken Hill Region New South Wales, Australia application/pdf 4.56MB 433
Powerpoint_6_7.pdf   Powerpoint 6.7: Proposed Temporal Patterns for Mineral Deposits in the Broken Hill Region New South Wales, Australia application/pdf 1.96MB 239
Powerpoint_6_8.pdf   Powerpoint 6.8: Spatial Patterns of Mineral Deposits in the Mount Isa Region Queensland, Australia application/pdf 1.48MB 262
Powerpoint_6_9.pdf   Powerpoint 6.9: Macro-Scale Patterns in Eastern Australia using Binary Slices of Magnetic Data application/pdf 6.01MB 196
benard.mpeg (stream)   benard.mpeg video/mpeg 1.77MB 45
ljr_phd_8_07a.pdf   Full text of thesis application/pdf 6.87MB 1666
lr_contact.pdf   Author contact details application/pdf 8.52KB 107
ppt_6_5_rev.pdf   Reasons for Revision of Powerpoint 6.5 application/pdf 6.77KB 47

Author(s) Robinson, Larry J.
Thesis Title The Spatial and Temporal Distribution of the Metal Mineralisation in Eastern Australia and the Relationship of the Observed Patterns to Giant Ore Deposits
School, Centre or Institute School of Earth Sciences
Institution The University of Queensland
Publication date 2007-08-16
Thesis type PhD Thesis
Supervisor(s) Suzanne D. Golding
Richard Wilson
Total pages 258
Collection year 2007
Language eng
Subjects 260106 Ore Deposit Petrology
269900 Other Earth Sciences
Abstract/Summary The introduced mineral deposit model (MDM) is the product of a trans-disciplinary study, based on Complexity and General Systems Theory. Both investigate the abstract organization of phenomena, independent of their substance, type, or spatial or temporal scale of existence. The focus of the research has been on giant, hydrothermal mineral deposits. They constitute <0.001% of the total number of deposits yet contain 70-85% of the world's metal resources. Giants are the definitive exploration targets. They are more profitable to exploit and less susceptible to fluctuations of the market. Consensus has it that the same processes that generate small deposits also form giants but those processes are simply longer, vaster, and larger. Heat is the dominant factor in the genesis of giant mineral deposits. A paleothermal map shows where the vast heat required to generate a giant has been concentrated in a large space, and even allows us to deduce the duration of the process. To generate a paleothermal map acceptable to the scientific community requires reproducibility. Experimentation with various approaches to pattern recognition of geochemical data showed that the AUTOCLUST algorithm not only gave reproducibility but also gave the most consistent, most meaningful results. It automatically extracts boundaries based on Voronoi and Delaunay tessellations. The user does not specify parameters; however, the modeller does have tools to explore the data. This approach is near ideal in that it removes much of the human-generated bias. This algorithm reveals the radial, spatial distribution, of gold deposits in the Lachlan Fold Belt of southeastern Australia at two distinct scales – repeating patterns every ~80 km and ~230 km. Both scales of patterning are reflected in the geology. The ~80 km patterns are nested within the ~230 km patterns revealing a self-similar, geometrical relationship. It is proposed that these patterns originate from Rayleigh-Bénard convection in the mantle. At the Rayleigh Number appropriate for the mantle, the stable planform is the spoke pattern, where hot mantle material is moving upward near the centre of the pattern and outward along the radial arms. Discontinuities in the mantle, Rayleigh-Bénard convection in the mantle, and the spatial distribution of giant mineral deposits, are correlative. The discontinuities in the Earth are acting as platforms from which Rayleigh-Bénard convection can originate. Shallow discontinuities give rise to plumelets, which manifest at the crust as repeating patterns ranging, from ~100 to ~1,000 km in diameter. Deeper discontinuities give rise to plumes, which become apparent at the crust as repeating patterns ranging from >1,000 to ~4,000 km in diameter. The deepest discontinuities give rise to the superplumes, which become detectable at the crust as repeating patterns ranging from >4,000 to >10,000 km in diameter. Rayleigh-Bénard convection concentrates the reservoir of heat in the mantle into specific locations in the crust; thereby providing the vast heat requirements for the processes that generate giant, hydrothermal mineral deposits. The radial spatial distribution patterns observed for gold deposits are also present for base metal deposits. At the supergiant Broken Hill deposit in far western New South Wales, Australia, the higher temperature Broken Hill-type deposits occur in a radial pattern while the lower temperature deposits occur in concentric patterns. The supergiant Broken Hill deposit occurs at the very centre of the pattern. If the supergiant Broken Hill Deposit was buried beneath alluvium, water or younger rocks, it would now be possible to predict its location with accuracy measured in tens of square kilometres. This predictive accuracy is desired by every exploration manager of every exploration company. The giant deposits at Broken Hill, Olympic Dam, and Mount Isa all occur on the edge of an annulus. There are at least two ways of creating an annulus on the Earth's surface. One is through Rayleigh-Bénard convection and the other is through meteor impact. It is likely that only 'large' meteors (those >10 km in diameter) would have any permanent impact on the mantle. Lesser meteors would leave only a superficial scar that would be eroded away. The permanent scars in the mantle act as ‘accidental templates’ consisting of concentric and possibly radial fractures that impose those structures on any rocks that were subsequently laid down or emplaced over the mantle. In southeastern Australia, the proposed Deniliquin Impact structure has been an 'accidental template' providing a 'line-of-least-resistance' for the ascent of the ~2,000 km diameter, offshore, Cape Howe Plume. The western and northwestern radial arms of this plume have created the very geometry of the Lachlan Fold Belt, as well as giving rise to the spatial distribution of the granitic rocks in that belt and ultimately to the gold deposits. The interplay between the templating of the mantle by meteor impacts and the ascent of plumelets, plumes or superplumes from various discontinuities in the mantle is quite possibly the reason that mineral deposits occur where they do.
Keyword(s) mineralisation
giant ore deposits
multifractal
mineral deposit model
Complexity Theory
Lachlan Fold Belt
General Systems Theory
Rayleigh-Bénard convection
Broken Hill Deposit
Olympic Dam Deposit
Mount Isa Deposit
deterministic chaos
nonlinear dynamics
paleothermal
plumes
temporal
spatial
fractal
Additional Notes Please note: Revision of PowerPoint 6-5 Coriolis versus Earth Tide Forces Further research has been carried out into the possible rotation of Rayleigh-Bénard convection plumes in the mantle. This research indicates that the likely forces causing a anticlockwise rotation of the plumes in the southern hemisphere is Earth Tide Forces. See: PowerPoint 6-5 VERSION 2 - Spatial Patterns of Gold Deposits, Bendigo-Ballarat Region, Victoria, Australia.ppt and Bostrom, R. C., 2000, Tectonic consequences of the Earth's rotation, Oxford University Press. New York, NY, United States. Pages: 266. 2000.
 
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