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Science China Earth Sciences, 2015
The North China craton (NCC) hosts numerous gold deposits and is known as the most gold-productive region of China. The gold deposits were mostly formed within a few million years in the Early Cretaceous (130-120 Ma), coeval with widespread occurrences of bimodal magmatism, rift basins and metamorphic core complexes that marked the peak of lithospheric
RiXiang Zhu +5 more
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The North China craton (NCC) hosts numerous gold deposits and is known as the most gold-productive region of China. The gold deposits were mostly formed within a few million years in the Early Cretaceous (130-120 Ma), coeval with widespread occurrences of bimodal magmatism, rift basins and metamorphic core complexes that marked the peak of lithospheric
RiXiang Zhu +5 more
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2020
Placer gold deposits are abundant in Mongolia and form through endogenic and exogenic processes. Deposits are classified into four major genetic types: (1) eluvial-weathering zone, (2) deluvial, (3) proluvial, and (4) alluvial. The most economic deposits are often sourced from upper Cretaceous rocks and formed in late Cenozoic alluvial fans (Liskun and
Tankhain Semeihan, Uyanga Bold
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Placer gold deposits are abundant in Mongolia and form through endogenic and exogenic processes. Deposits are classified into four major genetic types: (1) eluvial-weathering zone, (2) deluvial, (3) proluvial, and (4) alluvial. The most economic deposits are often sourced from upper Cretaceous rocks and formed in late Cenozoic alluvial fans (Liskun and
Tankhain Semeihan, Uyanga Bold
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2016
Brief description of the several orogenic gold deposits is provided together with the basic principles of the gold projects evaluation. Emphasis is made on methodology of the gold deposits sampling, geological interpretation and estimation resources.
Ulrich Kretschmar, Derek McBride
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Brief description of the several orogenic gold deposits is provided together with the basic principles of the gold projects evaluation. Emphasis is made on methodology of the gold deposits sampling, geological interpretation and estimation resources.
Ulrich Kretschmar, Derek McBride
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1987
Placer deposits provided early man with the first samples of gold and thereafter have accounted for a large production of the metal. If we include the Witwatersrand and other quartz-pebble conglomerates as fossil placers or modified placers, the placer type of auriferous deposit has provided more than two thirds of the world’s store of gold, about 80 ×
J. B. Tyrrell +12 more
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Placer deposits provided early man with the first samples of gold and thereafter have accounted for a large production of the metal. If we include the Witwatersrand and other quartz-pebble conglomerates as fossil placers or modified placers, the placer type of auriferous deposit has provided more than two thirds of the world’s store of gold, about 80 ×
J. B. Tyrrell +12 more
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1999
Abstract Epithermal ore deposits form in the shallow portions of hydrothermal systems, from the surface to less than about 1-km depth. The hydrothermal activity is associated with contemporaneous volcanism and related magma intrusions, and the ore is hosted typically by volcanic rocks.
Jeffrey W. Hedenquist, Antonio Arribas
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Abstract Epithermal ore deposits form in the shallow portions of hydrothermal systems, from the surface to less than about 1-km depth. The hydrothermal activity is associated with contemporaneous volcanism and related magma intrusions, and the ore is hosted typically by volcanic rocks.
Jeffrey W. Hedenquist, Antonio Arribas
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2020
Gold mineralization potential of Mongolia has been studied since the 1900s, and small-scale mining activities have been known in the Northern Khentii metallogenic zone of Mongolia. Based on joint Mongolian-Russian, Mongolian-Japanese, and European gold explorers, seven metallogenic belts are recognized: (1) Mongol-Altai, (2) Nuur, (3) Northern Mongolia,
Gunchin Dejidmaa, Uyanga Bold
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Gold mineralization potential of Mongolia has been studied since the 1900s, and small-scale mining activities have been known in the Northern Khentii metallogenic zone of Mongolia. Based on joint Mongolian-Russian, Mongolian-Japanese, and European gold explorers, seven metallogenic belts are recognized: (1) Mongol-Altai, (2) Nuur, (3) Northern Mongolia,
Gunchin Dejidmaa, Uyanga Bold
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