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Rosebery Deposit

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Journal Article
Journal: Economic Geology
Published: 01 July 1999
Economic Geology (1999) 94 (4): 529–546.
...Khin Zaw; D. L. Huston; R. R. Large Abstract The Rosebery deposit in western Tasmania is a polymetallic massive sulfide deposit hosted in felsic volcanics of the Cambrian Mount Read Volcanic belt. The deposit underwent upper greenschist facies regional metamorphism and related deformation during...
Journal Article
Journal: Economic Geology
Published: 01 May 1992
Economic Geology (1992) 87 (3): 706–719.
...Robert N. Smith; David L. Huston Abstract Studies of selected elements in the ores and wall rocks at the Rosebery deposit indicate the presence of three elemental suites: (1) elements concentrated in the upper portions of the orebody and in the adjacent wall rocks (Pb, Zn, Au, Ag, Cd, and Sb), (2...
Journal Article
Journal: Economic Geology
Published: 01 August 2001
Economic Geology (2001) 96 (5): 1055–1072.
... medium-grained quartz-porphyritic pumice breccia, black mudstone, and crystal-rich volcaniclastic sandstone, overlying a thick homogeneous sequence of rhyolitic pumice breccia. The major alteration minerals at Rosebery are arranged in a complex series of zones passing away from the deposit—quartz...
FIGURES
First thumbnail for: Hydrothermal Alteration and Volatile Element Halos...
Second thumbnail for: Hydrothermal Alteration and Volatile Element Halos...
Third thumbnail for: Hydrothermal Alteration and Volatile Element Halos...
Journal Article
Published: 01 October 1997
The Canadian Mineralogist (1997) 35 (5): 1325–1349.
Journal Article
Journal: Economic Geology
Published: 01 April 1981
Economic Geology (1981) 76 (2): 304–338.
...G. R. Green; M. Solomon; J. L. Walshe Abstract The Rosebery pyritic zinc-lead-copper-silver-gold orebody occurs in dominantly felsic volcanic rocks of Cambrian age in western Tasmania. Ore formation occurred in a marine environment following eruption of a thick pyroclastic unit consisting mainly...
Journal Article
Journal: Economic Geology
Published: 01 November 1974
Economic Geology (1974) 69 (7): 1086–1101.
...R. L. Brathwaite Abstract Strata-bound pyritic zinc-lead-copper and barite deposit, volcanic-sedimentary origin, comparable to kuroko deposits of Japan GeoRef, Copyright 2008, American Geological Institute. 1974 ...
Journal Article
Journal: Economic Geology
Published: 01 May 1992
Economic Geology (1992) 87 (3): 931–952.
... composition of the ore fluid at 150 degrees and 250 degrees C is consistent with derivation from evolved seawater. Sulfur isotope analyses of selected samples from the mineralized facies give delta 34 S values of 8.2 to 14.1 per mil; which is in the same range as values from the Rosebery deposit...
Image
Regional and mine stratigraphy (left and middle) of Rosebery area. Idealized cross-section of the Rosebery deposit (right) with the individual ore lenses (pink). Source: regional stratigraphy from Gifkins (2001), mine stratigraphy from Martin (2004) and cross-section from McNeill (2014).
Published: 05 September 2024
Fig. 3. Regional and mine stratigraphy (left and middle) of Rosebery area. Idealized cross-section of the Rosebery deposit (right) with the individual ore lenses (pink). Source: regional stratigraphy from Gifkins (2001) , mine stratigraphy from Martin (2004) and cross-section from McNeill
Image
Published: 01 August 2001
alteration fields relevant to the Rosebery deposit.
Image
Cross-sectional view of the K-lens deposit at the Rosebery mine. Source: modified from Large et al. (2001a).
Published: 05 September 2024
Fig. 10. Cross-sectional view of the K-lens deposit at the Rosebery mine. Source: modified from Large et al. (2001 a ) .
Journal Article
Published: 05 September 2024
Geochemistry: Exploration, Environment, Analysis (2024) 24 (3): geochem2024-008.
...Fig. 3. Regional and mine stratigraphy (left and middle) of Rosebery area. Idealized cross-section of the Rosebery deposit (right) with the individual ore lenses (pink). Source: regional stratigraphy from Gifkins (2001) , mine stratigraphy from Martin (2004) and cross-section from McNeill...
FIGURES
First thumbnail for: Whole rock lithogeochemical analysis of the Mount ...
Second thumbnail for: Whole rock lithogeochemical analysis of the Mount ...
Third thumbnail for: Whole rock lithogeochemical analysis of the Mount ...
Journal Article
Journal: Economic Geology
Published: 01 August 2001
Economic Geology (2001) 96 (5): 913–938.
... Mount Read Volcanics and the Cambro-Ordovician Mount Windsor subprovince, strongly reflect their volcanic environment, conditions of ore formation, and hydrothermal alteration processes. Lens and sheet-style polymetallic zinc-rich deposits such as Rosebery, Hellyer, Que River, and Thalanga...
FIGURES
First thumbnail for: The Spectrum of Ore <span class="search-highlight"...
Second thumbnail for: The Spectrum of Ore <span class="search-highlight"...
Third thumbnail for: The Spectrum of Ore <span class="search-highlight"...
Journal Article
Journal: Economic Geology
Published: 01 August 2001
Economic Geology (2001) 96 (5): 939–955.
... to white mica or in mixed assemblages with epidote. White micas in footwall alteration zones of the Rosebery stratiform Zn + Pb deposit (Tasmania) are variably phengitic, similar to those in regional background volcanics. A unit of relatively unaltered volcaniclastic sandstone in the Rosebery hanging-wall...
FIGURES
First thumbnail for: Short Wavelength Infrared (SWIR) Spectral Analysis...
Second thumbnail for: Short Wavelength Infrared (SWIR) Spectral Analysis...
Third thumbnail for: Short Wavelength Infrared (SWIR) Spectral Analysis...
Journal Article
Journal: Economic Geology
Published: 01 November 1988
Economic Geology (1988) 83 (7): 1307–1328.
...M. Solomon; Christopher J. Eastoe; J. L. Walshe; G. R. Green Abstract Most of the mineral deposits in the Mount Read Volcanics are of Cambrian age and are either stratiform exhalative bodies or epigenetic feeder systems (e.g., Rosebery, Mount Lyell, Que River). Others were formed at depth during...
Journal Article
Journal: Economic Geology
Published: 01 October 1987
Economic Geology (1987) 82 (6): 1521–1539.
... observed in polymetallic massive sulfide deposits, in particular those of the Rosebery, Hercules, and Hellyer deposits in western Tasmania. This similarity, along with the shape of the Pb vs. Zn plots, suggests that zinc and lead (as chloride complexes) were saturated in the metal-deficient (m (sub Sigma...
Series: Economic Geology Monograph Series
Published: 01 January 1989
DOI: 10.5382/Mono.06.40
EISBN: 9781629490014
... massive sulfide deposits: (1) a gold-zinc association (with lead, silver, and barite), which typically occurs throughout the massive and layered ores with gold and barite concentrated toward the stratigraphic hanging wall of the deposit (e.g., Rosebery, Que River, and Hellyer), and (2) a gold-copper...
Journal Article
Journal: Economic Geology
Published: 01 August 1995
Economic Geology (1995) 90 (5): 1167–1196.
...David L. Huston; Soey H. Sie; Gary F. Suter; David R. Cooke; Ross A. Both Abstract Part I. Pyrite, chalcopyrite, and sphalerite from six volcanic-hosted massive sulfide (Mount Chalmers, Rosebery, Waterloo, Agincourt, Dry River South, and Balcooma) deposits in eastern Australia were analyzed using...
Journal Article
Published: 01 August 2005
Geochemistry: Exploration, Environment, Analysis (2005) 5 (3): 267–277.
... minerals such as alkali feldspar and sericite, mainly as intergrowths. The Rosebery deposit, in the Mt Read Volcanics, is one of the major volcanic- hosted massive sulphide deposits in Australia. It has been recognized for a long time that extensive wallrock alteration occurs around this deposit...
FIGURES
First thumbnail for: The use of quartz concentrate (acid-insoluble resi...
Second thumbnail for: The use of quartz concentrate (acid-insoluble resi...
Third thumbnail for: The use of quartz concentrate (acid-insoluble resi...
Journal Article
Journal: Economic Geology
Published: 01 August 1987
Economic Geology (1987) 82 (5): 1239–1258.
... throughout the province. Chlorite Mg to Fe ratios appear to have been preserved through metamorphism. A combination of structural and alteration data is useful to mapping in the Mount Read Volcanics. This approach indicates that most syngenetic deposits and sedimentary lenses in the Rosebery-Hercules area...
Journal Article
Journal: Economic Geology
Published: 01 October 1986
Economic Geology (1986) 81 (6): 1341–1355.
... in the Murchison Volcanics about 2 to 3 km stratigraphically below the Farrell Slates.The sulfide deposits in the Farrell Slates are of Devonian age, but sulfur isotope studies and comparisons with the Cambrian massive sulfide horizons at Red Hills and Rosebery suggest that the slates are a local Cambrian...