Lithospheric controls on the formation of porphyry copper deposits: What could possibly go wrong?

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  • Опубліковано 20 тра 2023
  • 2 May 2023 presentation by Dr. Hervé Rezeau, Lundin Family Endowed Chair in Economic Geology, Dept Geosciences, University of Arizona.
    The 1-hour and 4-minute presentation comprises the body of the talk (48-minutes) followed by Q&A (16-minutes). A product of the Arizona Geological Society (AGS) (www.arizonageologicalsoc.org/). We thank Hexagon for providing the venue and recording this presentation. We thank the Rio Tinto Group for sponsoring this talk.
  • Наука та технологія

КОМЕНТАРІ • 3

  • @theotherside715
    @theotherside715 Рік тому +1

    As a hobby hard rock miner in southwest AZ this info is invaluable. Thumbs up for this excellent geology description/explanation. Wish I continued my degree at school of mines, UofA instead of physical metallurgy. More pls

  • @kathykarns9829
    @kathykarns9829 11 місяців тому

    Did the main copper bearing intrusion somehow break off and “float up”. There are interesting examples of suddenly detached iceberg “shooters” in ice shelves at the toe of a floating glacial ice stream in Alaska n bays rising up 2-3x higher than expected. Thus we see a kind of “telescoping” event play out in minutes. The shooter then collapses under its own weight. I felt it was illustrative of what might happen when “rotation” occurs during relaxation of collision stress. I suggest the “keels” of mountain regions may be thus elevated. And so provide a “pathway” for dikes, fluid flow, breccia dikes etc. see the elevation trend along the alto Andes for comparison. Spikes from below?

  • @clickfallrock
    @clickfallrock Місяць тому

    Please don't block the slides with a view of the speaker, it is very distracting and annoying