Archean Base and Precious Metal Deposits, Southern Abitibi Greenstone Belt, Canada

Chapter 1: Geology of the Abitibi Greenstone Belt
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Published:January 01, 2017
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CiteCitation
Thomas Monecke, Patrick Mercier-Langevin, Benoît Dubé, Ben M. Frieman, 2017. "Geology of the Abitibi Greenstone Belt", Archean Base and Precious Metal Deposits, Southern Abitibi Greenstone Belt, Canada, Thomas Monecke, Patrick Mercier-Langevin, Benoît Dubé
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Abstract
The Abitibi greenstone belt, which straddles the border between Ontario and Quebec in eastern Canada, represents one of the largest and best-preserved Neoarchean greenstone belts in the world. The belt consists of E-trending successions of folded volcanic and sedimentary rocks and intervening domes of intrusive rocks. Submarine volcanism occurred between 2795 and 2695 Ma. Six volcanic assemblages have been defined, recording submarine volcanism during specific periods of time. Komatiite successions within some of these volcanic assemblages are host to magmatic sulfide deposits. However, economically more important are volcanogenic massive sulfide (VMS) deposits, which contain a total of ~775 million...
- Abitibi Belt
- Archean
- Canada
- Canadian Shield
- Cochrane District Ontario
- correlation
- crustal shortening
- Eastern Canada
- greenstone belts
- history
- igneous rocks
- Kirkland Lake Ontario
- komatiite
- massive deposits
- massive sulfide deposits
- metal ores
- metamorphic belts
- Neoarchean
- Noranda Quebec
- North America
- Ontario
- orogeny
- polymetallic ores
- Precambrian
- Quebec
- Rouyn Quebec
- Superior Province
- tectonics
- Temiscamingue County Quebec
- Timiskaming District Ontario
- Timmins Ontario
- volcanic rocks
- volcanism