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NARROW
Format
Article Type
Journal
Publisher
Section
GeoRef Subject
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all geography including DSDP/ODP Sites and Legs
-
Africa
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East Africa
-
Eritrea (1)
-
-
-
Antelope Valley (2)
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Asia
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Far East
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Borneo
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East Malaysia
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Sarawak Malaysia (1)
-
-
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Malaysia
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East Malaysia
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Sarawak Malaysia (1)
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-
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Siberia (1)
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-
Australasia
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Australia
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Victoria Australia
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Bendigo Australia (2)
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Papua New Guinea
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Ok Tedi Mine (1)
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Battle Mountain (2)
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Canada
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Eastern Canada
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Ontario (1)
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Mackenzie Mountains (1)
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Nunavut (1)
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Western Canada
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Alberta (1)
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British Columbia (1)
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Crowsnest Pass (1)
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Northwest Territories (2)
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Caribbean region
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West Indies
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Antilles
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Greater Antilles
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Hispaniola
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Dominican Republic (1)
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-
-
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Central America (1)
-
Commonwealth of Independent States
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Russian Federation
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Timan Ridge (1)
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Timan Ridge (1)
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Urals
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Southern Urals (1)
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-
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Cortez Mountains (1)
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Europe
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Alps
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Eastern Alps
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Carnic Alps (1)
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Central Europe
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Austria (1)
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Southern Europe
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Italy (1)
-
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Timan Ridge (1)
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Malay Archipelago
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Borneo
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East Malaysia
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Sarawak Malaysia (1)
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-
-
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McGrath Quadrangle (1)
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Mexico (1)
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North America
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Basin and Range Province
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Great Basin (17)
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North American Cordillera (2)
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Rocky Mountains
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U. S. Rocky Mountains
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Bridger Range (1)
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Pinon Range (4)
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Railroad Valley (1)
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Red Hill (1)
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Roberts Mountains (17)
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Russian Platform
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Timan Ridge (1)
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South America
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Bolivia
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Potosi Bolivia (1)
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Brazil (1)
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Chile (1)
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Peru (1)
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United States
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Alaska (1)
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California
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Inyo County California (1)
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Northern California (1)
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San Bernardino County California (1)
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Siskiyou County California (1)
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Great Basin (17)
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Idaho (1)
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Montana
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Bridger Range (1)
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Gallatin County Montana (1)
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Madison County Montana (1)
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Nevada
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Carlin Mine (14)
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Carlin Trend (30)
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Churchill County Nevada (1)
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Clark County Nevada (3)
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Elko County Nevada
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Carlin Nevada (10)
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Eureka County Nevada
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Eureka Nevada (10)
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Humboldt County Nevada
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Getchell Mine (1)
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Lander County Nevada (17)
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Lincoln County Nevada (2)
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Mineral County Nevada (1)
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Nevada Test Site (1)
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Nye County Nevada
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Beatty Nevada (1)
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Grant Canyon Field (1)
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Tonopah Nevada (1)
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Trap Spring Field (1)
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Pershing County Nevada (2)
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Roberts Mountains Allochthon (8)
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Shoshone Mountains (1)
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Toquima Range (3)
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White Pine County Nevada
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Alligator Ridge Mine (1)
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Oklahoma
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Coal County Oklahoma (1)
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Oregon
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Deschutes County Oregon (1)
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Harney County Oregon (1)
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Lake County Oregon (1)
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Malheur County Oregon (1)
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Sevier orogenic belt (2)
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Tennessee
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Benton County Tennessee (1)
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Texas
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El Paso County Texas
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El Paso Texas (1)
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U. S. Rocky Mountains
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Bridger Range (1)
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Utah
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Millard County Utah (4)
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Thomas Range (1)
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Western U.S. (4)
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Wisconsin (1)
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commodities
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brines (1)
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geothermal energy (3)
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metal ores
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antimony ores (1)
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arsenic ores (2)
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base metals (2)
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copper ores (2)
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gold ores (53)
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polymetallic ores (2)
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pyrite ores (2)
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silver ores (2)
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uranium ores (1)
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zinc ores (1)
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mineral deposits, genesis (40)
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mineral exploration (10)
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mineral resources (1)
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oil and gas fields (2)
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petroleum (2)
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refractory materials (1)
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elements, isotopes
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carbon
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C-13/C-12 (7)
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C-14 (1)
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organic carbon (1)
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chemical ratios (1)
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halogens
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chlorine
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Cl-36 (1)
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-
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hydrogen
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D/H (3)
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deuterium (1)
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isotope ratios (15)
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isotopes
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radioactive isotopes
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C-14 (1)
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Cl-36 (1)
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Pb-206/Pb-204 (1)
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Pb-207/Pb-204 (1)
-
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stable isotopes
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C-13/C-12 (7)
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D/H (3)
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deuterium (1)
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He-4/He-3 (1)
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O-18/O-16 (9)
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Pb-206/Pb-204 (1)
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Pb-207/Pb-204 (1)
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S-34/S-32 (7)
-
Sr-87/Sr-86 (1)
-
-
-
metals
-
actinides
-
uranium (1)
-
-
alkaline earth metals
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strontium
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Sr-87/Sr-86 (1)
-
-
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arsenic (4)
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cadmium (1)
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gold (8)
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lead
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Pb-206/Pb-204 (1)
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Pb-207/Pb-204 (1)
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mercury (1)
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precious metals (4)
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rare earths (1)
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thallium (1)
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noble gases
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helium
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He-4/He-3 (1)
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-
radon (1)
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-
oxygen
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O-18/O-16 (9)
-
-
sulfur
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S-34/S-32 (7)
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trace metals (1)
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fossils
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Chordata
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Vertebrata
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Pisces
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Acanthodii (1)
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Chondrichthyes
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Elasmobranchii (1)
-
-
Osteichthyes (1)
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Placodermi (2)
-
-
-
-
Graptolithina
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Dendroidea (1)
-
-
Invertebrata
-
Arthropoda
-
Mandibulata
-
Crustacea
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Ostracoda
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Paleocopida (1)
-
-
-
-
Trilobitomorpha
-
Trilobita
-
Odontopleurida (1)
-
Ptychopariida
-
Olenidae (1)
-
-
-
-
-
Brachiopoda
-
Articulata
-
Pentamerida (1)
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Spiriferida (1)
-
Terebratulida (1)
-
-
-
Cnidaria
-
Anthozoa
-
Zoantharia
-
Rugosa (1)
-
-
-
-
Echinodermata
-
Asterozoa
-
Stelleroidea
-
Asteroidea (1)
-
-
-
Crinozoa
-
Crinoidea (2)
-
-
Echinozoa
-
Edrioasteroidea (1)
-
-
Homalozoa
-
Homoiostelea (1)
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Stylophora (1)
-
-
-
Mollusca
-
Gastropoda
-
Archaeogastropoda (1)
-
-
-
Porifera
-
Demospongea (1)
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Hexactinellida (2)
-
Stromatoporoidea (1)
-
-
Protista
-
Radiolaria
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Spumellina (1)
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-
-
-
microfossils
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Chitinozoa (2)
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Conodonta
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Icriodus (1)
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Polygnathus (1)
-
-
-
palynomorphs
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Chitinozoa (2)
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miospores (1)
-
-
Plantae
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Spermatophyta
-
Angiospermae
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Dicotyledoneae
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Platanus (1)
-
-
-
-
-
-
geochronology methods
-
Ar/Ar (9)
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exposure age (1)
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fission-track dating (4)
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K/Ar (4)
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paleomagnetism (1)
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racemization (1)
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radiation damage (1)
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tephrochronology (1)
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thermochronology (2)
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U/Pb (8)
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U/Th/Pb (1)
-
-
geologic age
-
Cenozoic
-
Quaternary
-
Pleistocene
-
Lake Lahontan (1)
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upper Pleistocene (1)
-
-
upper Quaternary (1)
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Tertiary
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middle Tertiary (1)
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Neogene
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Miocene
-
middle Miocene (1)
-
-
Pliocene
-
upper Pliocene (1)
-
-
-
Paleogene
-
Eocene
-
upper Eocene (1)
-
-
Oligocene (2)
-
-
-
-
Lake Bonneville (1)
-
Mesozoic
-
Cretaceous
-
Middle Cretaceous (1)
-
Upper Cretaceous (2)
-
-
Jurassic (5)
-
Navajo Sandstone (1)
-
-
MIS 2 (1)
-
Paleozoic
-
Cambrian
-
Upper Cambrian (1)
-
-
Carboniferous
-
Diamond Peak Formation (2)
-
Lower Carboniferous (1)
-
Mississippian
-
Chainman Shale (4)
-
Lower Mississippian
-
Kinderhookian
-
Banff Formation (1)
-
-
Tournaisian (1)
-
-
Middle Mississippian (1)
-
Upper Mississippian (2)
-
-
Pennsylvanian
-
Upper Pennsylvanian (1)
-
-
-
Devonian
-
Lower Devonian
-
Emsian (2)
-
Gedinnian (1)
-
Lochkovian (3)
-
Pragian (2)
-
-
Middle Devonian
-
Eifelian (2)
-
Givetian (3)
-
-
Popovich Formation (6)
-
Upper Devonian
-
Famennian (1)
-
-
-
Exshaw Formation (1)
-
Hanson Creek Formation (6)
-
lower Paleozoic
-
Cape Phillips Formation (1)
-
-
middle Paleozoic (1)
-
Ordovician
-
Antelope Valley Limestone (4)
-
Eureka Quartzite (1)
-
Lower Ordovician
-
Fillmore Formation (4)
-
Floian (1)
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Ibexian (1)
-
Tremadocian (1)
-
-
Middle Ordovician
-
Whiterockian (6)
-
-
Upper Ordovician
-
Caradocian (2)
-
Cincinnatian
-
Maysvillian (1)
-
Richmondian (1)
-
-
Edenian (1)
-
-
Vinini Formation (9)
-
-
Permian
-
Lower Permian
-
Wolfcampian (1)
-
-
-
Pilot Shale (3)
-
Silurian
-
Middle Silurian
-
Roberts Mountains Formation (12)
-
-
-
upper Paleozoic (1)
-
-
Precambrian
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Archean (1)
-
upper Precambrian
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Proterozoic
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Neoproterozoic (1)
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-
-
-
-
igneous rocks
-
igneous rocks
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plutonic rocks
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diorites (1)
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granites
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aplite (1)
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-
lamprophyres (1)
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pegmatite (1)
-
-
volcanic rocks
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dacites (1)
-
pyroclastics
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ash-flow tuff (1)
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ignimbrite (1)
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-
rhyolites (1)
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-
-
-
minerals
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arsenides (2)
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carbonates
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calcite (4)
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dolomite (2)
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halides (2)
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minerals (7)
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native elements (1)
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oxides
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iron oxides (1)
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phosphates
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apatite (4)
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monazite (1)
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silicates
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framework silicates
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silica minerals
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quartz (3)
-
-
-
orthosilicates
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nesosilicates
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zircon group
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zircon (7)
-
-
-
-
sheet silicates
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clay minerals
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halloysite (1)
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illite (2)
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mica group
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phlogopite (1)
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sericite (1)
-
-
-
sulfates
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alunite (1)
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barite (3)
-
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sulfides
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orpiment (4)
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pyrite (4)
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realgar (4)
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sphalerite (1)
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stibnite (1)
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zinc sulfides (1)
-
-
sulfosalts (2)
-
-
Primary terms
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absolute age (16)
-
Africa
-
East Africa
-
Eritrea (1)
-
-
-
Asia
-
Far East
-
Borneo
-
East Malaysia
-
Sarawak Malaysia (1)
-
-
-
Malaysia
-
East Malaysia
-
Sarawak Malaysia (1)
-
-
-
-
Siberia (1)
-
-
Australasia
-
Australia
-
Victoria Australia
-
Bendigo Australia (2)
-
-
-
Papua New Guinea
-
Ok Tedi Mine (1)
-
-
-
biogeography (5)
-
bitumens (1)
-
brines (1)
-
Canada
-
Eastern Canada
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Ontario (1)
-
-
Mackenzie Mountains (1)
-
Nunavut (1)
-
Western Canada
-
Alberta (1)
-
British Columbia (1)
-
Crowsnest Pass (1)
-
Northwest Territories (2)
-
-
-
carbon
-
C-13/C-12 (7)
-
C-14 (1)
-
organic carbon (1)
-
-
Caribbean region
-
West Indies
-
Antilles
-
Greater Antilles
-
Hispaniola
-
Dominican Republic (1)
-
-
-
-
-
-
Cenozoic
-
Quaternary
-
Pleistocene
-
Lake Lahontan (1)
-
upper Pleistocene (1)
-
-
upper Quaternary (1)
-
-
Tertiary
-
middle Tertiary (1)
-
Neogene
-
Miocene
-
middle Miocene (1)
-
-
Pliocene
-
upper Pliocene (1)
-
-
-
Paleogene
-
Eocene
-
upper Eocene (1)
-
-
Oligocene (2)
-
-
-
-
Central America (1)
-
chemical analysis (2)
-
Chordata
-
Vertebrata
-
Pisces
-
Acanthodii (1)
-
Chondrichthyes
-
Elasmobranchii (1)
-
-
Osteichthyes (1)
-
Placodermi (2)
-
-
-
-
climate change (2)
-
continental shelf (2)
-
crust (9)
-
crystal chemistry (2)
-
crystal growth (1)
-
crystal structure (3)
-
data processing (3)
-
deformation (5)
-
diagenesis (5)
-
earthquakes (2)
-
economic geology (12)
-
education (1)
-
engineering geology (1)
-
epeirogeny (1)
-
Europe
-
Alps
-
Eastern Alps
-
Carnic Alps (1)
-
-
-
Central Europe
-
Austria (1)
-
-
Southern Europe
-
Italy (1)
-
-
Timan Ridge (1)
-
-
faults (29)
-
folds (6)
-
foliation (1)
-
fractures (2)
-
geochemistry (21)
-
geochronology (2)
-
geodesy (1)
-
geophysical methods (10)
-
geosynclines (1)
-
geothermal energy (3)
-
Graptolithina
-
Dendroidea (1)
-
-
ground water (4)
-
heat flow (4)
-
hydrogen
-
D/H (3)
-
deuterium (1)
-
-
hydrogeology (1)
-
igneous rocks
-
plutonic rocks
-
diorites (1)
-
granites
-
aplite (1)
-
-
lamprophyres (1)
-
pegmatite (1)
-
-
volcanic rocks
-
dacites (1)
-
pyroclastics
-
ash-flow tuff (1)
-
ignimbrite (1)
-
-
rhyolites (1)
-
-
-
inclusions
-
fluid inclusions (5)
-
-
intrusions (15)
-
Invertebrata
-
Arthropoda
-
Mandibulata
-
Crustacea
-
Ostracoda
-
Paleocopida (1)
-
-
-
-
Trilobitomorpha
-
Trilobita
-
Odontopleurida (1)
-
Ptychopariida
-
Olenidae (1)
-
-
-
-
-
Brachiopoda
-
Articulata
-
Pentamerida (1)
-
Spiriferida (1)
-
Terebratulida (1)
-
-
-
Cnidaria
-
Anthozoa
-
Zoantharia
-
Rugosa (1)
-
-
-
-
Echinodermata
-
Asterozoa
-
Stelleroidea
-
Asteroidea (1)
-
-
-
Crinozoa
-
Crinoidea (2)
-
-
Echinozoa
-
Edrioasteroidea (1)
-
-
Homalozoa
-
Homoiostelea (1)
-
Stylophora (1)
-
-
-
Mollusca
-
Gastropoda
-
Archaeogastropoda (1)
-
-
-
Porifera
-
Demospongea (1)
-
Hexactinellida (2)
-
Stromatoporoidea (1)
-
-
Protista
-
Radiolaria
-
Spumellina (1)
-
-
-
-
isostasy (2)
-
isotopes
-
radioactive isotopes
-
C-14 (1)
-
Cl-36 (1)
-
Pb-206/Pb-204 (1)
-
Pb-207/Pb-204 (1)
-
-
stable isotopes
-
C-13/C-12 (7)
-
D/H (3)
-
deuterium (1)
-
He-4/He-3 (1)
-
O-18/O-16 (9)
-
Pb-206/Pb-204 (1)
-
Pb-207/Pb-204 (1)
-
S-34/S-32 (7)
-
Sr-87/Sr-86 (1)
-
-
-
lava (1)
-
magmas (4)
-
Malay Archipelago
-
Borneo
-
East Malaysia
-
Sarawak Malaysia (1)
-
-
-
-
Mesozoic
-
Cretaceous
-
Middle Cretaceous (1)
-
Upper Cretaceous (2)
-
-
Jurassic (5)
-
Navajo Sandstone (1)
-
-
metal ores
-
antimony ores (1)
-
arsenic ores (2)
-
base metals (2)
-
copper ores (2)
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gold ores (53)
-
polymetallic ores (2)
-
pyrite ores (2)
-
silver ores (2)
-
uranium ores (1)
-
zinc ores (1)
-
-
metals
-
actinides
-
uranium (1)
-
-
alkaline earth metals
-
strontium
-
Sr-87/Sr-86 (1)
-
-
-
arsenic (4)
-
cadmium (1)
-
gold (8)
-
lead
-
Pb-206/Pb-204 (1)
-
Pb-207/Pb-204 (1)
-
-
mercury (1)
-
precious metals (4)
-
rare earths (1)
-
thallium (1)
-
-
metamorphism (3)
-
metasomatism (20)
-
Mexico (1)
-
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GeoRef Categories
Era and Period
Epoch and Age
Book Series
Date
Availability
Supergene Oxidized Gold-Silver Deposits in the Americas: Guides for Geologists Available to Purchase
Rare stromatoporoids from the Lower Devonian (Emsian) of Nevada, and their biostratigraphic and paleobiogeographic significance Open Access
Carbonate Sedimentology and Conodont Biostratigraphy of Late Pennsylvanian–Early Permian Stratigraphic Sequences, Carlin Canyon, Nevada: New Insights into the Tectonic and Oceanographic Significance of an Iconic Succession of the Basin and Range Available to Purchase
The Gzhelian (Upper Pennsylvanian) to Kungurian (Lower Permian) succession around Carlin Canyon, northern Nevada, in the Basin and Range province of the western USA is a relatively undeformed wedge of fossiliferous marine carbonate and fine-grained calcareous and cherty clastic rocks that rests with profound angular unconformity on Mississippian to mid-Pennsylvanian sedimentary rocks that had been uplifted, faulted, folded, and eroded prior to the Late Pennsylvanian transgression. This wedge of sediments, which tapers over less than 2 km from 1341 m in the west to 588 m in the east, comprises the Strathearn, Buckskin Mountain, and lower part of the Beacon Flat formations. These units form a second-order sequence within which five third-order unconformity-bounded transgressive–regressive sequences are nested. These sequences are Gzhelian, early to late Asselian, latest Asselian to late Sakmarian, latest Sakmarian to late Artinskian, and latest Artinskian to late Kungurian in age based on the determination and biostratigraphic interpretation of 26 conodont taxa, including two new species ( Adetognathus carlinensis n. sp. and Sweetognathus trexleri n. sp.). Each sequence records sedimentation on a westward-dipping ramp along which significant facies change occurs with inner-ramp coarse-grained algal and bioclastic photozoan grainstone to the east passing westward into mid- to outer-ramp heterozoan carbonate, and ultimately into deep-water fine-grained mixed clastic–carbonate facies with no fossils except sponge spicules, representing deep-water sedimentation in a basinal area that underwent repeated episodes of rapid subsidence associated with each sequence. Accommodation during sedimentation of Gzhelian–Kungurian sequences around Carlin Canyon was repeatedly created in response to flexural subsidence caused by tectonic loading west of the study area. Each sequence recorded the simultaneous foundering of the basinal area in the west and uplift of the basin margin in the east. Individual sequences overlap the underlying sequence to the east, while flexural subsidence from the Gzhelian to the earliest Artinskian led to a basin in the west that became deeper over time. A lull in tectonic activity associated with each sequence allowed carbonates to prograde from east to west, partially filling the basinal area until the early Artinskian, and completely filling it to sea level during the late Artinskian and then again in the late Kungurian. The Gzhelian–Kungurian carbonate succession of the Carlin Canyon area bears much resemblance with the coeval succession that occurs all along the northwest margin of Pangea, from Nevada in the south to the Canadian Arctic islands in the north, and down from the Barents Sea to the central Urals to the east. That broad area was affected by the same oceanographic events, the most significant of which was the earliest Sakmarian closure of the Uralian seaway, which prevented warm water from the Tethys Ocean from reaching the northwestern Pangea margin as it did before; this led to much cooler oceanic conditions all along western North America, even in the low tropical paleolatitudes where northern Nevada was located, in spite of a globally warming climate following the end of the late Paleozoic ice age.
Evolution of the Pennsylvanian Ely–Bird Spring Basin: Insights from Carbon Isotope Stratigraphy Available to Purchase
Analysis and correlation of strata in ancient basins are commonly difficult due to a lack of high-resolution age control. This study tackled this problem for the latest Mississippian to middle Pennsylvanian Ely–Bird Spring basin. Here, 1095 new carbon isotope analyses combined with existing biostratigraphy at six sections throughout the basin constrain changes in relative sediment accumulation rates in time and space. The Ely–Bird Spring basin contains dominantly shallow-water carbonates exposed in eastern and southern Nevada, western Utah, and southeastern California. It formed as part of the complex late Paleozoic southwestern Laurentian plate margin. However, the detailed evolution of the basin, and hence the tectonic driver(s) of deformation, is poorly understood. The combined isotopic and biostratigraphic data were correlated using the Match-2.3 dynamic programming algorithm. The correlations show a complex picture of sediment accumulation throughout the life of the Ely–Bird Spring basin. Initially, the most rapid sediment accumulation was in the eastern part of the basin. Throughout Morrowan time, the most rapid sediment accumulation migrated to the northwestern part of the basin, culminating in a peak of sediment accumulation in Atokan time. This peak records tectonic loading at the north or northwest margin of the basin. Basin sedimentation was interrupted by early Desmoinesian time in the north by formation of northwest-directed thrust faults, folds, uplift, and an associated unconformity. Deposition continued in the south with a correlative conformity and increased clastic input. The combination of isotopic and biostratigraphic data for correlation is therefore a valuable tool for elucidating temporal basin evolution and can be readily applied to tectonically complex carbonate basins worldwide.
Detrital Zircon U-Pb Geochronology of Upper Devonian and Lower Carboniferous Strata of Western Laurentia (North America): A Record of Transition from Passive to Convergent Margin Open Access
Magmatism, migrating topography, and the transition from Sevier shortening to Basin and Range extension, western United States Available to Purchase
ABSTRACT The paleogeographic evolution of the western U.S. Great Basin from the Late Cretaceous to the Cenozoic is critical to understanding how the North American Cordillera at this latitude transitioned from Mesozoic shortening to Cenozoic extension. According to a widely applied model, Cenozoic extension was driven by collapse of elevated crust supported by crustal thicknesses that were potentially double the present ~30–35 km. This model is difficult to reconcile with more recent estimates of moderate regional extension (≤50%) and the discovery that most high-angle, Basin and Range faults slipped rapidly ca. 17 Ma, tens of millions of years after crustal thickening occurred. Here, we integrated new and existing geochronology and geologic mapping in the Elko area of northeast Nevada, one of the few places in the Great Basin with substantial exposures of Paleogene strata. We improved the age control for strata that have been targeted for studies of regional paleoelevation and paleoclimate across this critical time span. In addition, a regional compilation of the ages of material within a network of middle Cenozoic paleodrainages that developed across the Great Basin shows that the age of basal paleovalley fill decreases southward roughly synchronous with voluminous ignimbrite flareup volcanism that swept south across the region ca. 45–20 Ma. Integrating these data sets with the regional record of faulting, sedimentation, erosion, and magmatism, we suggest that volcanism was accompanied by an elevation increase that disrupted drainage systems and shifted the continental divide east into central Nevada from its Late Cretaceous location along the Sierra Nevada arc. The north-south Eocene–Oligocene drainage divide defined by mapping of paleovalleys may thus have evolved as a dynamic feature that propagated southward with magmatism. Despite some local faulting, the northern Great Basin became a vast, elevated volcanic tableland that persisted until dissection by Basin and Range faulting that began ca. 21–17 Ma. Based on this more detailed geologic framework, it is unlikely that Basin and Range extension was driven by Cretaceous crustal overthickening; rather, preexisting crustal structure was just one of several factors that that led to Basin and Range faulting after ca. 17 Ma—in addition to thermal weakening of the crust associated with Cenozoic magmatism, thermally supported elevation, and changing boundary conditions. Because these causal factors evolved long after crustal thickening ended, during final removal and fragmentation of the shallowly subducting Farallon slab, they are compatible with normal-thickness (~45–50 km) crust beneath the Great Basin prior to extension and do not require development of a strongly elevated, Altiplano-like region during Mesozoic shortening.
Nanoscale isotopic evidence resolves origins of giant Carlin-type ore deposits Open Access
Middle and late Pleistocene pluvial history of Newark Valley, central Nevada, USA Available to Purchase
ABSTRACT Newark Valley lies between the two largest pluvial lake systems in the Great Basin, Lake Lahontan and Lake Bonneville. Soils and geomorphology, stratigraphic interpretations, radiocarbon ages, and amino acid racemization geochronology analyses were employed to interpret the relative and numerical ages of lacustrine deposits in the valley. The marine oxygen isotope stage (MIS) 2 beach barriers are characterized by well-preserved morphology and deposits with youthful soil development, with Bwk horizons and maximum stage I+ carbonate morphology. Radiocarbon ages of gastropods and tufas within these MIS 2–age deposits permit construction of a latest Pleistocene lake-level curve for Newark Valley, including a maximum limiting age of 13,780 ± 50 14 C yr B.P. for the most recent highstand, and they provide a calibration point for soil development in lacustrine deposits in the central Great Basin. The MIS 8–age to MIS 4–age beach barriers are higher in elevation and represent a larger lake than existed during MIS 2. The beach barriers have subdued morphology, are only preserved in short segments, and have stronger soil development, with Bkm and/or Bkmt horizons and maximum stage III+ to IV carbonate morphology. Newark Lake reached elevations higher than the MIS 2 highstand during at least two additional pluvial periods, MIS 16 and MIS 12, 10, or 8. These oldest lacustrine deposits do not have preserved shoreline features and are represented only by gravel lags, buried deposits, and buried soils with similar strong soil development. This sequence of middle and latest Pleistocene shorelines records a long-term pluvial history in this basin that remained internally drained for the last four or more pluvial cycles. Obtaining numerical ages from material within lacustrine deposits in the Great Basin can be challenging. Amino acid D/L values from gastropod shells and mollusk valves proved to be a valuable tool to correlate lacustrine deposits within Newark Valley. Comparison of soils and geomorphology results to independent 36 Cl cosmogenic nuclide ages from a different study indicated unexpected changes in rates of soil development during the past ~200,000 yr and suggested that common stratigraphic changes in lake stratigraphy could obscure incremental changes in soil development and/or complicate 36 Cl cosmogenic nuclide age estimates.
Quantitative Mineral Mapping of Drill Core Surfaces II: Long-Wave Infrared Mineral Characterization Using μ XRF and Machine Learning Open Access
Quantitative Mineral Mapping of Drill Core Surfaces I: A Method for µ XRF Mineral Calculation and Mapping of Hydrothermally Altered, Fine-Grained Sedimentary Rocks from a Carlin-Type Gold Deposit Open Access
The geophysical response of the Goldrush-Fourmile orebody and implications for camp-scale Carlin-type deposit exploration, Cortez District, Nevada Available to Purchase
Early Sevier orogenic deformation exerted principal control on changes in depositional environment recorded by the Cretaceous Newark Canyon Formation Available to Purchase
Chapter 16: Giant Carlin-Type Gold Deposits of the Cortez District, Lander and Eureka Counties, Nevada Available to Purchase
Abstract The Cortez district is in one of the four major Carlin-type gold deposit trends in the Great Basin province of Nevada and contains three giant (>10 Moz) gold orebodies: Pipeline, Cortez Hills, and Goldrush, including the recently discovered Fourmile extension of the Goldrush deposit. The district has produced >21 Moz (653 t) of gold and contains an additional 26 Moz (809 t) in reserves and resources. The Carlin-type deposits occur in two large structural windows (Gold Acres and Cortez) of Ordovician through Devonian shelf- and slope-facies carbonate rocks exposed through deformed, time-equivalent lower Paleozoic siliciclastic rocks of the overlying Roberts Mountains thrust plate. Juxtaposition of these contrasting Paleozoic strata occurred during the late Paleozoic Antler orogeny along the Roberts Mountains thrust. Both upper and lower plate sequences were further deformed by Mesozoic compressional events. Regional extension, commencing in the Eocene, opened high- and low-angle structural conduits for mineralizing solutions and resulted in gold deposition in reactive carbonate units in structural traps, including antiforms and fault-propagated folds. The Pipeline and Cortez Hills deposits are located adjacent to the Cretaceous Gold Acres and Jurassic Mill Canyon granodioritic stocks, respectively; although these stocks are genetically unrelated to the later Carlin-type mineralization event, their thermal metamorphic aureoles may have influenced ground preparation for later gold deposition. Widespread decarbonatization, argillization, and silicification of the carbonate host rocks accompanied gold mineralization, with gold precipitated within As-rich rims on fine-grained pyrite. Pipeline and Cortez Hills also display deep supergene oxidation of the hypogene sulfide mineralization. Carlin-type mineralization in the district is believed to have been initiated in the late Eocene (>35 Ma) based on the age of late- to postmineral rhyolite dikes at Cortez Hills. The Carlin-type gold deposits in the district share common structural, stratigraphic, alteration, and ore mineralogic characteristics that reflect common modes of orebody formation. Ore-forming fluids were channeled along both low-angle structures (Pipeline, Goldrush/Fourmile) and high-angle features (Cortez Hills), and gold mineralization was deposited in Late Ordovician through Devonian limestone, limy mudstone, and calcareous siltstone. The Carlin-type gold fluids are interpreted to be low-salinity (2–3 wt % NaCl equiv), low-temperature (220°–270°C), and weakly acidic, analogous to those in other Carlin-type gold deposits in the Great Basin. The observed characteristics of the Cortez Carlin-type gold deposits are consistent with the recently proposed deep magmatic genetic model. Although the deposits occur over a wide geographic area in the district, it is possible that they initially formed in greater proximity to each other and were then spatially separated during Miocene and post-Miocene regional extension.
Episodic fluid flow in an active fault Open Access
The Carlin Gold System: Applications to Exploration in Nevada and Beyond Available to Purchase
Abstract Mining of Carlin-type gold deposits in Nevada has made the United States one of the leading gold producers in the world for almost four decades. These deposits constitute an endowment of ~255 Moz (7,931 tonnes) of gold, of which 89% occurs in four main clusters of deposits: the Carlin trend, Getchell, Cortez, and Jerritt Canyon. These four clusters share many characteristics, including (1) formation during a narrow time interval (42–34 Ma), (2) lithologic and structural controls to fluid flow and ore deposition, (3) geochemical signature of the ores, (4) hydrothermal alteration and ore paragenesis, (5) relatively low temperatures and salinities of ore fluids, (6) fairly shallow depths of formation, and (7) lack of mineral and elemental zoning. A mineral systems approach to exploring for Carlin-type gold deposits in Nevada and elsewhere is presented, in which critical processes are laid out: (1) development of source(s) for gold and other critical components of the ore fluid, (2) formation of fluid pathways, (3) water-rock interaction and gold deposition, and (4) a tectonic trigger. The critical processes are then converted into a practical targeting system for Carlin-type gold deposits within and outside of Nevada, ranging from regional to district to drill target (<~20 km 2 ) scales. The critical processes of the Carlin mineral system are translated into targeting elements and mappable targeting criteria. At the regional scale, targeting elements for magmatic sources of gold and ore fluid components include (1) intrusive centers with a mantle component to the magmas, (2) processes that could result in metasomatized subcontinental lithospheric mantle, (3) high-K, H 2 O-rich calc-alkaline magmas, and (4) evidence for fluid release. For crustal sources of gold, targeting elements include (1) carbonaceous sedimentary rocks with diagenetic/syngenetic sulfides enriched in Au-As-Hg-Tl-Sb-(Te) and sulfates and (2) a heat source to drive convection of meteoric and/or formation of metamorphic fluids. Targeting elements for fluid pathways at the regional scale include (1) basement suture zones and rifted continental margins, (2) long-lived upper crustal faults that may be linked to basement faults, and (3) a reduced crustal section to ensure long transport of gold by sulfide-rich fluids. Targeting elements at the regional scale for water-rock interaction and gold deposition include (1) passive margin dominated by carbonate rocks, (2) contractional deformation and formation of regional thrust faults and fold belts, and (3) a regional Au-As-Hg-Tl-Sb-(Te) geochemical signature. Targeting elements for tectonic triggers include (1) changes from contraction to extension, (2) periods of intense magmatism, especially related to slab rollback, and (3) plate reorganization. At the district scale, targeting elements for fluid pathways include (1) old reactivated high-angle fault zones, (2) zones of abundant low-displacement, high-angle extensional faults, (3) fault intersections, and (4) lithologic rheology contrasts, such as preore intrusions and contact aureoles. For water-rock interaction and gold deposition, targeting elements include (1) carbonate-bearing stratigraphy, (2) low-angle features that could divert upwelling fluids out of high-angle faults and into reactive wall rocks, (3) hydrothermal system of targeted age, (4) alteration consistent with wall-rock reaction with acidic, sulfide-rich hydrothermal fluids, and (5) Fe-rich rocks in the stratigraphic section, which will drive sulfidation. At the drill target scale, the targeting elements for fluid pathways are zones of increased fault/fracture permeability. The targeting elements for water-rock interaction and gold deposition include (1) zones of increased low-angle permeability in carbonate rocks proximal to high-angle faults, (2) favorable alteration, especially hydrothermal carbonate dissolution and silicification, (3) Fe-rich rocks including ferroan carbonates and mafic volcanic rocks and intrusions, (4) favorable Au-As-Hg-Tl-Sb-(Te) geochemical signature with low base metals and Ag/Au ratios, and (5) favorable mineralization, especially arsenian pyrite with textures and chemistry consistent with Carlin-type deposits.