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Blind River conglomerate

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Journal Article
Journal: Economic Geology
Published: 01 November 1958
Economic Geology (1958) 53 (7): 889–890.
Journal Article
Journal: Economic Geology
Published: 01 May 1959
Economic Geology (1959) 54 (3): 511–512.
Image
Published: 23 March 2018
-rich sandstone; c—boulder-sized chert conglomerate. (E) Detail of the red Roadian (lower Middle Permian) conglomerates at the Bukken River section in northern Axel Heiberg Island. rc—Red weathering conglomerate. (F) Bukken River section, northern Axel Heiberg Island. (G) Detail of the conglomerates
Journal Article
Journal: Economic Geology
Published: 01 June 1960
Economic Geology (1960) 55 (4): 659–694.
...D. S. Robertson; N. C. Steenland Abstract Ore conglomerates of the Blind River [Ontario, Canada], area lie at or near the base of the Huronian sedimentary section in discontinuous, sheetlike, partly overlapping, SE.-trending zones within a major NNE. belt. They are part of a sequence of detrital...
Publisher: Economic Geology Publishing Company
Published: 01 January 1981
DOI: 10.5382/AV75.05
EISBN: 9781934969533
... Africa, Blind River-Elliot Lake in Canada, Tarkwa in Ghana, and Jacobina in Brazil. The most significant of these, by far, is the Witwatersrand Basin, knowledge of which has provided the basis for understanding the processes of ore formation which are common to all the deposits. The lower age limit...
Journal Article
Published: 06 May 2011
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (2011) 48 (5): 779–792.
... the older pyritic quartz-pebble conglomerates at the base of the Matinenda Formation in the Elliot Lake and Blind River areas, these conglomerates contain no uraninite and are polymict with material derived from a highly restricted catchment area with marked local and regional topographic relief. Porous...
FIGURES | View All (12)
Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 01 August 1997
GSA Bulletin (1997) 109 (8): 915–935.
... strata eastward over steeply dipping Mesozoic strata and rotated Eocene synorogenic conglomerate. During this stage of deformation, the Moncrief Conglomerate was deformed, as the initially blind thrusts propagated into the near-surface conglomerate deposits, truncated the entire footwall syncline...
Journal Article
Published: 01 November 1977
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (1977) 14 (11): 2495–2509.
...Darrel G. F. Long Abstract Conglomeratic rocks are present near the top of a dominantly arenaceous sequence, previously ascribed entirely to the Huronian Mississagi Formation, in a belt extending for about 60 km east of Blind River, on the north shore of Lake Huron. These conglomeratic rocks...
Journal Article
Journal: Economic Geology
Published: 01 August 1960
Economic Geology (1960) 55 (5): 906–927.
...Duncan R. Derry Abstract The 10 U mines now in production in the Blind River area of Ontario have provided considerable new evidence on the origin of the deposits and have been the subject of a number of studies by government, company, and research geologists. An attempt is here made to coordinate...
Journal Article
Journal: Economic Geology
Published: 01 March 1960
Economic Geology (1960) 55 (2): 410–414.
... is misleading because Stokes' Law cannot be applied. Cases are known where radioactivity is higher in coarse clastic sediments than in adjacent fine-grained ones. Most quartz-pebble conglomerates in the Blind River (Ontario) area contain more Th than U. There is no positive correlation between pyrite content...
Journal Article
Journal: Economic Geology
Published: 01 June 1958
Economic Geology (1958) 53 (4): 417–425.
...J. D. Bateman Abstract Uranium and gold are associated with pyrite in the matrix of Precambrian quartz pebble conglomerates in the Canavieiras mine area, Jacobina range, Brazil. Similarities between these deposits and those of the Witwatersrand (South Africa) and Blind River (Ontario) districts...
Image
Published: 01 July 2010
Figure 5. Thalweg profile along the Pellahuén valley. (A) Distribution of multicolored conglomerates. Note that they mainly reach mapped elevations of 75 m above present river level. However, mapped maximum elevations amount to 180 m, delineating the minimum thickness of the former valley fill
Journal Article
Published: 01 October 1983
Jour. Geol. Soc. India (1983) 24 (10): 489–501.
... activity (Bhola et a/1958; Bhattacharya et a/1966) led to their detailed study. Both the Blind River and Witwatersrand uranium deposits occur in Lower Proterozoic quartz-pebble conglomerates. The fact that (i) the Singhbhum Shear Zone uranium deposits occur in early Proterozoic rocks (Chaibasa Formation...
Journal Article
Published: 01 February 1975
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (1975) 12 (2): 237–251.
... conglomerate ore of the Elliot Lake – Blind River area. The sandstones also contain paraconglomerate units at several stratigraphic levels which are lithologically similar to the Ramsay Lake and Bruce Formations.Trends in Huronian stratigraphy on the North Shore of Lake Huron suggest that in the Morin Township...
Journal Article
Published: 01 February 1982
Jour. Geol. Soc. India (1982) 23 (2): 85–89.
... in shield areas like the Rand and Blind River conglomerates. The basal conglomerate of Sigegudda separates two major episodes of earth history in the craton and qualifies to became a datum line between Sargur and Dharwar sequences. The Sigegudda unconformity is therefore not an unconformity within...
Journal Article
Published: 01 May 2002
Geological Magazine (2002) 139 (3): 331–341.
...P. ALFARO; J. M. ANDREU; J. DELGADO; A. ESTÉVEZ; J. M. SORIA; T. TEIXIDÓ Abstract The blind reverse Bajo Segura Fault is located at the eastern extreme of the Trans-Alboran shear zone (Betic Cordillera, southeast Iberian Peninsula). The surface expression of recent activity of this blind ENE–WSW...
FIGURES | View All (9)
Journal Article
Published: 01 March 2012
Jour. Geol. Soc. India (2012) 79 (3): 279–286.
... Professional Paper 1161-Q , 23 p. Grandstaff , D. E. (1975) Microprobe analyses of uranium and thorium in uraninite from the Witwatersrand, South Africa and Blind River, Ontario, Canada . In: Genesis of uranium and gold bearing Precambrian Quartz-pebble conglomerates, Proceedings of a workshop...
FIGURES | View All (4)
Journal Article
Published: 01 March 1984
Journal of the Geological Society (1984) 141 (2): 229–233.
... conglomerates in the Canadian Shield Pap. geol. Surv. Canada 1969 68–40 205 Roscoe, S. M. & Steacy, H. R. 1958. On the geology and radioactive deposits of Blind River region. Second U.N. Int. Conf. on the Peaceful Uses of Atomic Energy, Geneva, 475–83 Tanaka, R. T. 1983. Trace-element...
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 April 1964
AAPG Bulletin (1964) 48 (4): 544.
... containing a great variety of sedimentary rocks such as conglomerate, arenites, argillite, siltstone, greywacke, limestone, and quartzite. Thickness and facies changes indicate a northwesterly source, northerly overlap, and deposition in shallow water controlled by basement topography. The Lower Huronian...
Journal Article
Published: 01 March 2022
Bulletin of Canadian Energy Geoscience (2022) 69 (1): 51–72.
... separation where it ends at the Mitchell River normal fault ( Fig. 3 ). Margin collapse megaclasts and conglomerates occur locally in the overlying folded succession and tie the sequence to the platform margin ( Fig. 6d ). Up to approximately 700 m of normal stratigraphic separation occurs on the Mitchell...
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