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noranda area

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Journal Article
Published: 01 April 1994
Exploration and Mining Geology (1994) 3 (2): 131–160.
Journal Article
Published: 01 September 1993
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (1993) 30 (9): 1934–1954.
... O were leached from the rocks by hydrothermal solutions, whereas large amounts of hydrothermal FeO and seawater MgO were added.Oxygen isotope depletions are among the largest in the Noranda area and extend laterally and vertically up to 300 m from the orebody. Within this volume, δ 18 O values...
Journal Article
Published: 01 July 1992
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (1992) 29 (7): 1349–1374.
...T. J. Barrett; S. Cattalani; L. Hoy; J. Riopel; P.-J. Lafleur Abstract The Mobrun polymetallic deposit near Rouyn–Noranda comprises two complexes of massive sulfide lenses within mainly felsic volcanic rocks of the Archean Blake River Group. The Main lens contained 3.37 Mt of massive sulfides...
Journal Article
Published: 01 November 1991
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (1991) 28 (11): 1699–1730.
... m of massive sulfide. Finely banded cherty tuff, with sphalerite–pyrite–chalcopyrite, forms a discontinuous fringe to the deposit.The two main lenses of massive sulfide have the highest contents of Cu, Ag, and Au and are thought to have formed in areas of major hydrothermal input. Altered feeder...
Journal Article
Published: 01 September 1991
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (1991) 28 (9): 1301–1327.
...T. J. Barrett; S. Cattalani; F. Chartrand; P. Jones Abstract The original Aldermac mine near Noranda contained several Cu–Zn massive sulfide lenses hosted by felsic to mafic volcanic rocks of the late Archean Blake River Group. The original Nos. 3–6 orebodies, which consisted of massive pyrite...
Journal Article
Published: 01 April 1991
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (1991) 28 (4): 465–488.
Series: Society of Economic Geologists Guidebook Series
Published: 01 January 1991
DOI: 10.5382/GB.10
EISBN: 9781934969632
Journal Article
Published: 01 December 1987
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (1987) 24 (12): 2551–2567.
...Osamu Ujike; A. M. Goodwin Abstract Felsic magma petrogenesis was studied by analyzing 24 stratigraphically controlled Archean andesite-to-rhyolite lava flows of both tholeiitic and calc-alkalic affinity from the upper Noranda Subgroup, Quebec, using instrumental neutron activation and X-ray...
Journal Article
Published: 01 February 1984
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (1984) 21 (2): 220–231.
...Léopold Gélinas; Pierre Trudel; Claude Hubert Abstract The effusive rocks of the Blake River Group in the Abitibi volcanic belt, Rouyn–Noranda region, belong to a bimodal sequence in which andesites and rhyolites clearly dominate. The identification of calc-alkaline and tholeiitic affinities...
Journal Article
Published: 01 July 1979
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (1979) 16 (7): 1315–1340.
Journal Article
Published: 01 June 1978
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (1978) 15 (6): 902–918.
...Erich Dimroth; Pierre Cousineau; Maxime Leduc; Yves Sanschagrin Abstract Archean subaqueous basalt flows in Rouyn–Noranda area consist of several structural divisions in vertical sequence. The complete, ideal sequence of structural divisions within a typical flow is, from base to top: massive lava...
Journal Article
Published: 01 February 1978
American Mineralogist (1978) 63 (1-2): 205–209.
...J. M. Allen; R. Goldie Abstract Electron microprobe analyses of apparently equilibrium pairs of coexisting actinolite and hornblende from the metamorphosed Flavrian Pluton near Noranda, Quebec, demonstrate that the actinolite-hornbiende miscibility gap extends to extremely iron-rich compositions...
Journal Article
Published: 01 January 1978
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (1978) 15 (1): 132–144.
Journal Article
Published: 01 August 1965
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (1965) 2 (4): 361–384.
...E. R. Kanasewich; R. M. Farquhar Abstract Lead isotope ratios indicate that very old galenas in Archean volcanics and sediments in the vicinity of Timmins, Ontario; Noranda and Val d'Or, Quebec, have had additions of younger lead of the type found near Cobalt, Ontario. The mixture of leads of two...
Journal Article
Published: 01 January 1993
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (1993) 30 (1): 29–41.
...J. K. Mortensen Abstract U–Pb zircon ages for 15 volcanic and plutonic units in the Noranda and Kirkland Lake areas help constrain the history of volcanism, plutonism, sedimentation, and deformation in the south-central part of the Abitibi belt. Volcanism occurred over an interval of at least 50 Ma...
Journal Article
Published: 01 October 1990
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (1990) 27 (10): 1348–1358.
...G. Camiré; D. H. Watkinson Abstract The Hunter Creek Fault (HCF) has been considered in the past as a major synvolcanic fault marked by a change in volcanic facies and separating two geologically distinct blocks within the Noranda volcanic complex: the North Mine and the Central Mine sequences...
Journal Article
Published: 01 January 1989
Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences (1989) 26 (1): 88–105.
...Stavros I. Kalogeropoulos; Steven D. Scott Abstract The Main Contact Tuff, in the vicinity of Millenbach mine, Noranda, Quebec, is an extensive, although discontinuous, ore-related volcanic exhalative metalliferous sediment, or "tuffaceous exhalite," of Archean age. It was formed by the variable...
Image
The geology of the Noranda area classified by rock type, with the legend lower right and the key to important mineral deposits above the legend. The area outlines are shown in white. Modified from Jørgensen et al. (2022).
Published: 01 April 2023
Figure 2. The geology of the Noranda area classified by rock type, with the legend lower right and the key to important mineral deposits above the legend. The area outlines are shown in white. Modified from Jørgensen et al. (2022) .
Image
Geological map of the southern section of the Royn-Noranda area, showing the lithostratigraphy, location of the CTZ, and selected gold deposits, including working areas at the Astoria and McWatters deposits.
Published: 10 July 2007
Fig. 3. Geological map of the southern section of the Royn-Noranda area, showing the lithostratigraphy, location of the CTZ, and selected gold deposits, including working areas at the Astoria and McWatters deposits.
Image
Map of the Senneterre–Noranda area, showing the known distribution of Proterozoic diabase dykes. Stereograms on the margin of the map show the maximum and minimum susceptibility axes in relation to the strike of the Senneterre dykes at the sample sites indicated by open circles and a corresponding BX sample number. Site NL29, whose stereogram is shown at the top of the figure, is located north of the map area (see location in Fig. 1).
Published: 31 May 2007
Fig. 12. Map of the Senneterre–Noranda area, showing the known distribution of Proterozoic diabase dykes. Stereograms on the margin of the map show the maximum and minimum susceptibility axes in relation to the strike of the Senneterre dykes at the sample sites indicated by open circles