Archaean Ultramafic Flows in Canada and Their Relevance to the Geology of Nickel Sulfide Deposits
    
    - Organization:
 - The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
 - Pages:
 - 2
 - File Size:
 - 52 KB
 - Publication Date:
 - Jan 1, 1973
 
Abstract
A sequence of ultramafic units, very well exposed in Munro township in the Abitibi areal,  of the Cahadian Shield, exhibit features which  indicate that they are sub-aqueous extrusions.  They occur within a sequence of tholeiitic  pillow lavas, thin graphitic sediments. and  large differentiated sills. The units range  from a few metres to more than 250 m in length  and less than 1 m to over 30 m in thickness.  Over 60 individual units, occurring as flat  pancakes on top of one another, make up a  total exposed thickness of 150 m. The units  have formed from a magma composed of a very  olivine-rich picritic liquid carrying up,to  40 per cent olivine phenocrysts in suspension. Different units display a variety,of  cross-sectional profiles. As an example of  the most extreme type of profile, a typical  unit 2 m thick consists of a cap of highly  jointed fine-grained quenched rock, 10-30 cm  thick, which becomes coarser downwards, grading  into a zone composed of radiating and criss- crossing skeletal olivine crystals forming the well-known spinifex texture. This becomes  even coarser-grained downwards, with "books"  of parallel platey olivine crystals developing  sub-perpendicular to the plane of the units.  Beneath this zone, which may be up to 1 m  thick, there is an abrupt transition to a  cumulus-textured rock composed of rounded
Citation
APA: (1973) Archaean Ultramafic Flows in Canada and Their Relevance to the Geology of Nickel Sulfide Deposits
MLA: Archaean Ultramafic Flows in Canada and Their Relevance to the Geology of Nickel Sulfide Deposits. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1973.