1-20 OF 1366 RESULTS FOR

Jasper Point Formation

Results shown limited to content with bounding coordinates.
Follow your search
Access your saved searches in your account

Would you like to receive an alert when new items match your search?
Close Modal
Sort by
Journal Article
Published: 01 June 1968
Bulletin of Canadian Petroleum Geology (1968) 16 (2): 210.
...J. L. Weiner The Late Precambrian Old Fort Point Formation in the Jasper area is 900 to 1200 ft thick and divisible into four members. Member A consists largely of blue slates. Although over most of the area green and purple slates, siltstones and limestones make up Member B, in the extreme...
Journal Article
Published: 01 March 1965
Bulletin of Canadian Petroleum Geology (1965) 13 (1): 198.
...C. R. Evans The Old Fort Point Formation of the Jasper anticlinorium comprises some 1200 feet of argillite, siltstone, limestone, and limestone-breccia, probably Precambrian in age. The sequence, divided into four members, probably records the westward migration of an ancient delta. Member...
Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 01 October 1985
GSA Bulletin (1985) 96 (10): 1322–1331.
...NICHOLAS L. BOGEN Abstract Detailed mapping in the foothills of the central Sierra Nevada has revealed that the Lower Jurassic Peñon Blanco Formation and the newly named Jurassic-Triassic Jasper Point Formation occupy the core of a previously unrecognized anticline of Late Jurassic age...
Image
Figure 8. Th/Yb-Nb/Yb of samples from Peñon Blanco and Jasper Point Formations. This diagram shows depleted nature of mantle from which both were derived. The Jasper Point basalts have almost no Th enrichment and do not appear fractionated, whereas the Peñon Blanco basalts show relatively large enrichments and a strong fractionation trend. Normal mid-ocean-ridge basalt (N-MORB) and ocean-island basalt (OIB) values are from Sun and McDonough (1989). Figure is after Pearce et al. (1995). Circles—Peñon Blanco basalts; diamonds—Jasper Point basalts.
Published: 01 July 2007
Figure 8. Th/Yb-Nb/Yb of samples from Peñon Blanco and Jasper Point Formations. This diagram shows depleted nature of mantle from which both were derived. The Jasper Point basalts have almost no Th enrichment and do not appear fractionated, whereas the Peñon Blanco basalts show relatively large
Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 01 July 2007
GSA Bulletin (2007) 119 (7-8): 1014–1024.
...Figure 8. Th/Yb-Nb/Yb of samples from Peñon Blanco and Jasper Point Formations. This diagram shows depleted nature of mantle from which both were derived. The Jasper Point basalts have almost no Th enrichment and do not appear fractionated, whereas the Peñon Blanco basalts show relatively large...
FIGURES | View All (11)
Image
Figure 9. Pb/Ce-Sr/Nd diagram of samples from Peñon Blanco and Jasper Point Formations. This diagram shows the relative importance of subducted sediment versus seawater. The Peñon Blanco basalts have much stronger enrichments than the Jasper Point basalts, indicating that subducted sediments and seawater played a stronger role in their formation. Circles—Peñon Blanco basalts; diamonds—Jasper Point basalts. N-MORB—normal mid-ocean-ridge basalt.
Published: 01 July 2007
Figure 9. Pb/Ce-Sr/Nd diagram of samples from Peñon Blanco and Jasper Point Formations. This diagram shows the relative importance of subducted sediment versus seawater. The Peñon Blanco basalts have much stronger enrichments than the Jasper Point basalts, indicating that subducted sediments
Image
Figure 6. Ti/V plot of samples from Peñon Blanco and Jasper Point Formations. This diagram shows the hydrous nature of melts from the Peñon Blanco arc, with discrimination fields from Shervais (1982) for reference. Circles—Peñon Blanco basalts; diamonds—Jasper Point basalts. MORB—mid-ocean-ridge basalt.
Published: 01 July 2007
Figure 6. Ti/V plot of samples from Peñon Blanco and Jasper Point Formations. This diagram shows the hydrous nature of melts from the Peñon Blanco arc, with discrimination fields from Shervais (1982) for reference. Circles—Peñon Blanco basalts; diamonds—Jasper Point basalts. MORB—mid-ocean
Image
Figure 7. Ta-Hf/3-Th plot of samples from Peñon Blanco and Jasper Point Formations. This diagram shows low Ta abundances for both basalts and higher relative Th abundances for the Peñon Blanco basalts, with discrimination fields of Wood (1980) for reference. Circles—Peñon Blanco basalts; diamonds—Jasper Point basalts. MORB—mid-ocean-ridge basalt; N—normal; E—enriched.
Published: 01 July 2007
Figure 7. Ta-Hf/3-Th plot of samples from Peñon Blanco and Jasper Point Formations. This diagram shows low Ta abundances for both basalts and higher relative Th abundances for the Peñon Blanco basalts, with discrimination fields of Wood (1980) for reference. Circles—Peñon Blanco basalts
Journal Article
Published: 01 September 1965
Bulletin of Canadian Petroleum Geology (1965) 13 (3): 453.
... of mineral assemblage the rocks have been assigned to the quartz-albite-muscovite-chlorite subfacies of the greenschist metamorptfic facies. Potassium-Argon ages of detrital muscovite from the Old Fort Point, Miette and Jasper Formations range from 1176±9 to 1046±50 m.y. The maximum age, obtained from...
Journal Article
Journal: Economic Geology
Published: 01 June 2013
Economic Geology (2013) 108 (4): 739–779.
... by recrystallization of jasper, formation of magnetite (± martite), and the local introduction of quartz and carbonate-sulfide (±quartz) veins; (2) intermediate alteration, synchronous with the main iron ore-forming event, which is accompanied by widespread development of martite, quartz-hematite and hematite-quartz...
FIGURES | View All (20)
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 August 1973
AAPG Bulletin (1973) 57 (8): 1474–1484.
... the Ste. Genevieve Formation and Aux Vases Limestone. Average depth to the top of pay is just over 600 ft. By the end of the year 15 wells had been completed, with average initial production of 190 BOPD. Evidence points to oil accumulation due to doming over a Silurian pinnacle reef. Silurian reefs...
FIGURES
Image
Hand specimen and thin section photographs of iron formation lithofacies. (A) Fine parallel lamination of discrete magnetite laminae (black arrow) and grey-green carbonate-greenalite layers in greenalite-magnetite-carbonate facies iron formation. Note the nearly 1 cm thick magnetite-poor carbonate layer (white arrow), which is shown in detail in (D). (B) Hematite-magnetite-chert-carbonate facies of the uppermost Hotazel Formation in drill core MFT2. Lamination consists of light red jasper bands, dark red hematite-magnetite-carbonate layers, very thin black magnetite laminae, and grey carbonate layers showing slumping and dewatering structures (black arrows). (C) Hematite-magnetite-carbonate iron formation with magnetite-rich (dark) and magnetite-poor (light) hematite laminae. (D) The magnetite-poor carbonate band pointed out in (A) shows a porphyrotopic fabric with 30 to 100 μm large poikilotopic dolomite rhombs. Note the ca. 50 μm large greenalite rosettes (black arrow) in very fine crystalline matrix. Plane-polarized light. (E) Red hematite-rich carbonate ovoids (<150 μm, black arrow) in oxide facies iron formation are surrounded by small white hematite crystals that sometimes even replace the whole ovoid. The hematite rims could have formed in the following way: ovoids precipitated first from seawater followed by carbonate mud with lower density (higher water content) that now represents the interstitial ankerite. The density difference caused an elevated micropermeability around ovoids, which provided a pathway for early diagenetic fluids that formed hematite. (For interpretation of the references to color in this figure, the reader is referred to the web version of this article.)
Published: 01 December 2014
-poor carbonate layer (white arrow), which is shown in detail in (D). ( B ) Hematite-magnetite-chert-carbonate facies of the uppermost Hotazel Formation in drill core MFT2. Lamination consists of light red jasper bands, dark red hematite-magnetite-carbonate layers, very thin black magnetite laminae
Journal Article
Published: 01 June 1965
Bulletin of Canadian Petroleum Geology (1965) 13 (2): 346–348.
... to the top of the Shunda Formation although workers hav e previously mapped it as the top of the Turner Valley Formation (see Mount Greenock section in Drummond, 1961 ; Green, 1962 ; see also Mountjoy, 1962 , p . 102) . We interpret the Jasper Lake Member to be a faeies of the Shund a for three reasons : 1...
...-ultramafic basement, the 300-Ma Tuolumne ophiolite mélange of Saleeby (1982) , the overlying Upper Triassic–lowermost Jurassic mafic volcanic Jasper Point and Peñon Blanco formations, and the Don Pedro mafic intrusive complex. Previous workers interpreted this package of rocks as either a polygenetic...
FIGURES | View All (5)
Journal Article
Published: 19 September 2023
Journal of the Geological Society (2023) 180 (5): jgs2023-054.
...%. Stage two involved the dissolution of dolomite, evinced by the abundant pores and rhombohedral grains of quartz, to form Cr- and Ni-rich jasper and quartzites. Formation of the jasper–quartzites involves a mass reduction of c. 80%. The listvenite-like and jasper–quartzite rocks show enrichment...
FIGURES | View All (10)
Journal Article
Published: 01 September 2023
South African Journal of Geology (2023) 126 (3): 275–294.
..., tourmaline, jasper, epidote and a final stage involving the formation of barren quartz veins. The veins contain low-salinity (3 to 11 wt.% NaCl eq.), three phase (liquid + vapour ± opaques) fluid inclusions with total homogenisation temperatures of 125 to 320°C. The δ 18 O values of the quartz veins range from...
FIGURES | View All (13)
Journal Article
Published: 01 March 2014
Bulletin of Canadian Petroleum Geology (2014) 62 (1): 1–13.
... other Miette Formation strata as defined by Walcott (1913) . The name “Old Fort Point” comes from a prominent local landmark south of the Jasper townsite where accessible exposures of the unit are located ( Fig. 3B ). Evans (1961) mapped the OFP at the Old Fort Point landmark and divided it into four...
FIGURES | View All (4)
Journal Article
Published: 01 June 2022
South African Journal of Geology (2022) 125 (2): 211–216.
... deposits ( cf ., Jasper et al., 2021 ; and citations therein), thus the record of pre-Aptian evidence for wildfires is rather scarce for the entire southern hemisphere (=Gondwana). Two records based on charcoal come from the middle – upper Valanginian (?) Kirkwood Formation of the Algoa Basin...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Published: 01 March 2022
Jour. Geol. Soc. India (2022) 98 (3): 395–401.
... basin ( Jasper et al., 2012 ). Subsequently Mahesh et al., (2015 ) reported Late Permian charcoal from the Barren Measures Formation of the South Karanpura coalfield, Damodar basin and also Late Permian charcoal from the Mand-Raigarh coalfield, Mahanadi basin ( Mahesh et al., 2017 ). Additionally...
FIGURES | View All (6)
Journal Article
Published: 01 June 1965
Bulletin of Canadian Petroleum Geology (1965) 13 (2): 340–345.
... Mount Greenock area and surrounding areas for the Geological Survey o f Canada, the writer and his assistants have measured over 20 sections in northern Jasper National Park to deternune the regional character of the Rundle Group and to outline recognizable formations and members . The reasons...