S.V. Dorovsky, V.N. Dorovsky*, and A.M. Blokhin**
Novosibirsk State University, 2 ul. Pirogova, Novosibirsk, 630090, Russia * Institute of Geology and Mineralogy, Siberian Branch of the RAS, 3 prosp. Akad. Koptyuga, Novosibirsk, 630090, Russia ** Institute of Mathematics, Siberian Branch of the RAS, 4 prosp. Akad. Koptyuga, Novosibirsk, 630090, Russia
Keywords: Electrodynamics, layered liquid dielectrics, oil-water systems, obliteration, methods of electrical prospecting
Pages: 1165-1172 Subsection: GEOPHYSICS
We investigate the stability of oil-water layered systems at arbitrary values of physical parameters. It is essential to distinguish the known electric-hydrodynamic instability from parametric resonance. Parametric resonance in layered systems under alternating current shows the presence of two frequency bands which differ in behavior of foreign charge storage. We report numerical experiments on the nonlinear behavior of parametric resonance in layered systems subject to acoustic excitation. Periodic pulse impact on the boundary of a layered system causes an increase of several orders of magnitude in the amplitude of its elastic stress relative to the initial distribution.
Yu.L. Rebetsky and A.V. Marinin
United Institute of the Physics of the Earth, Russian Academy of Sciences, 10 ul. B. Gruzinskaya, Moscow, 123995, Russia
Keywords: Tectonic stress, earthquake mechanism, brittle failure, earthquake nucleation area
Pages: 1173-1185 Subsection: GEOPHYSICS
The preseismic stress field on the western flank of the Sunda seismic arc before the great Sumatra-Andaman earthquake modeled from earthquake mechanism data shows a heterogeneous pattern in the area of the pending source. The first motion in the source of the coming great event occurred within the region of high deviatoric and isotropic stresses near their steepest gradients. Seismic radiation in the earthquake culminated in the zone of lowest stress extending for about 350 km along the northern edge of Sumatra Island as far as the Nicobar Islands. The revealed stress distribution in the earthquake nucleation area agrees well with laboratory experiments on rock failure in which low and medium stresses correspond to brittle failure. The suggested model of the metastable state of rocks in seismogenic regions includes the presence of different stress zones and the formation of a zone of high stress gradient in the place of the pending bigger earthquake.
Four climatholiths of the Upper Pleistocene are used in Siberia as regional stratigraphic horizons: Kazantsevo, Zyrjanka, Karginsky, and Sartan. Their geochronological basis is discussed in this paper. A conclusion is made that they are erroneously correlated in the official stratigraphic scheme. New detailed data obtained by international teams on key sections of Arctic Siberia suggest an alternative division of the Upper Pleistocene. A new version of chronostratigraphic scheme of West Siberia is proposed for discussion. The new scheme for the lower Upper Pleistocene is based on well-known key sections of the Karginsky and Zyrjanka Horizons. The main thermomer of the Upper Pleistocene is represented by the Malaya Kheta and Karginsky strata with geochronometric marks corresponding to early marine isotope stage 5. The complex of the last glaciation (Zyrjanka Horizon) is dated within a broad interval from 100 to 50 kyr BP. Two new horizons with stratotypes on the Yamal Peninsula are proposed for the second half of the Upper Pleistocene. These are the cold Var'yakha interstadial about 50-30 kyr BP and the Syoyakha cryomer 30-11 kyr BP. The new horizons are in good paleoclimatic correspondence with the Middle and Late Pleniglacial of Europe.
G.V. Polyakov, A.E. Izokh, and A.P. Krivenko
Institute of Geology and Mineralogy, Siberian Branch of the RAS, 3 prosp. Akad. Koptyuga, Novosibirsk, 630090, Russia
Keywords: Magmatism, geodynamics, mobile belt, platiniferous ultramafic-mafic complexes
Pages: 1201-1216 Subsection: METALLOGENY AND ORE FORMATION PROBLEMS
Platiniferous ultramafic-mafic magmatic assemblages of different types of mobile belt structures from the folded framing of the Siberian and South Chinese cratons are considered in a wide span of time, from Precambrian to Mesozoic. Attention is given to platinum mineralization linked to diverse complexes formed under different geodynamic settings: ultrabasic and basic intrusions of Precambrian greenstone belts, layered ultramafic-mafic intrusions of marginal near-platform rift-related structures, Alpine-type ultrabasic rocks of Riphean-Early Paleozoic ophiolite belts, volcanic-plutonic complexes of Paleozoic collision orogens, picrite-dolerite and alkali-basite volcanic-plutonic associations of Hercynian and Permian-Triassic systems.
A.A. Sidorov and A.V. Volkov
Institute of Geology of Mineral Deposits, Petrography, Mineralogy, and Geochemistry, Russian Academy of Sciences, 35 Staromonetny per., Moscow, 119017, Russia
Keywords: Cratonic terranes, metallogeny, ore formation, gold
Pages: 1217-1231 Subsection: METALLOGENY AND ORE FORMATION PROBLEMS
We investigate cratonic terranes in northeastern Russia which have very high mineral potential but remain poorly explored or not explored at all. The suggested synthesis of the available data from an underexplored but exceptionally rich province provides evidence of high metallogenic prospects of cratonic terranes and their surroundings in northeastern Russia as well as in other regions. Especially good prospects are expected for gold mineralization, which shows continuous development from Precambrian to Cenozoic structures of northeastern Russia.
E.G. Distanov, A.S. Borisenko, A.A. Obolensky, V.I. Sotnikov, and V.I. Lebedev*
Institute of Geology and Mineralogy, Siberian Branch of the RAS, 3 prosp. Akad. Koptyuga, Novosibirsk, 630090, Russia * Tuvinian Institute of Complex Exploration of Natural Resources, Siberian Branch of the RAS, 177a ul. Internatsional'naya, Kyzyl, 667007, Russia
Keywords: Metallogeny, terrane analysis, ore deposits, geodynamic settings
Pages: 1232-1250 Subsection: METALLOGENY AND ORE FORMATION PROBLEMS
A general metallogenic analysis and metallogenic zoning of the Altai-Sayan orogenic area (ASOA) were carried out in terms of the modern plate tectonics and mantle geodynamics concepts. The Altai-Sayan folded area is an example of a polyaccretionary orogenic system that resulted from the long evolution of the Paleoasian ocean. The main metallogenic belts have been recognized, in which typical ore associations (model types of mineral deposits) and their ages and geodynamic settings of formation have been established. A total of 48 metallogenic belts including 450 mineral deposits of 70 model types were studied. These belts are related to four time spans (metallogeny epochs) corresponding to the cycles of geodynamic processes that led to the formation of the polyaccretionary orogenic area: Riphean-Vendian (1200-620 Ma); Vendian-Silurian (620-410 Ma); Devonian-Early Carboniferous (410-320 Ma); and Late Permian-Triassic (260-205 Ma). Study was also given to typical geodynamic settings in which ore-forming productive systems originated. It is shown that the metallogenic evolution of the ASOA was determined mainly by the multistage formation of active continental margins and island-arc systems in the Riphean-Vendian and Early (V-S) and Middle (D-C1) Paleozoic. At the postorogenic stage, the ASOA evolution was the most productive in the Triassic. The geodynamic and metallogenic events in this period were determined by the tectonothermal activity on the periphery of the Permo-Triassic Siberian superplume in the interblock zones of the orogenic collage, which led to serious shifts along the plate and block boundaries, the formation of near-fault troughs and grabens, appearance of rift structures, and development of anorogenic granitoid magmatism (manifested as alkali and subalkalic rare-metal granites) and alkali-basaltoid magmatism. Transpression settings (oblique subduction) and plume magmatism are shown to have played a key role in the formation of mantle and mantle-crustal ore-forming systems. For the Middle Paleozoic and Mesozoic stages, new geochronological evidence has been obtained, and spatial and temporal correlations for the formation of the main types of mercury, gold, and rare-metal deposits have been made.
In the Orhon-Selenge trough (OST) (northern Mongolia), which is part of the extended Permo-Triassic Selenge volcanoplutonic belt, the formation of ore-bearing porphyry complex and large-scale stockwork Cu-Mo mineralization (Erdenetiyn-Ovoo deposit) was preceded by multiphase magmatism, which was accompanied by ore mineralization of different scales and types. The evolution of the Permo-Triassic magmatism successively resulted in ore occurrences, which form a single metallogenic series (predominance of Cu and permanent presence of Mo): native Cu (P; differentiated basalt-andesite-rhyolite series)-Cu-Ni-sulfide, Cu-skarn, and Cu-vein (P2-T1; basites and granitoids of the Selenge complex)-native Cu (P2-T1; trachyandesite-basalt series)-porphyry Cu-Mo (T; Erdenet ore-bearing porphyry complex). In this series, the intensity of fluid flow grows and the redox potential of the endogenous system shifts to that of more oxidizing conditions, which favors the transfer of ore-forming elements from depth and increases the Cu-bearing capacity of magmatogene fluids. The development of magmatism and accompanying mineralization in the OST is assumed to be related to one of the lower-mantle plumes that existed in the vast Asian area in the Permo-Triassic.
E.G. Konnikov, S.G. Simakin*, D.A. Orsoev**, E.G. Sidorov***, and V.A. Chubarov***
Institute of Experimental Mineralogy, Russian Academy of Sciences, 4 ul. Institutskaya, Chernogolovka, Moscow Region, 142432, Russia * Institute of Microelectronics and Informatics, Russian Academy of Sciences, 1 ul. Universitetskaya, Yaroslavl', 150051, Russia ** Geological Institute, Siberian Branch of the RAS, 6a ul. Sakh'yanovoi, Ulan Ude, 670047, Russia *** Institute of Volcanology and Seismology, Russian Academy of Sciences, 9 bul'var Piipa, Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky, 683006, Russia
Keywords: Trace-element pattern, rocks, minerals, depletion, nickel, gabbro-cortlandite complex, rifting
Pages: 1260-1270 Subsection: METALLOGENY AND ORE FORMATION PROBLEMS
The internal structure and proportions of the main rocks of the Kuvalorog gabbro-cortlandite massif, the largest intrusion on the Kamchatka Peninsula, are considered. The intrusive rocks are shown to abound in pargasitic amphibolite and biotite. Ultrabasic orthopyroxene contains melt inclusions with porphyritic pargasite phenocrysts, which point to a high water content in the parental melt of this intrusion. In trace-element patterns of rocks and minerals the massif is similar to Ni-bearing traps of the Siberian Platform. The behavior of lanthanides in the cortlandites evidences that their parental magma was melted out of a garnet-bearing mantle source and then crystallized under high-pressure conditions. Like the productive intrusions in the Noril'sk district, the rocks and all rock-forming minerals of the Kuvalorog massif are depleted in Ni relative to chondrite C1, which indicates a high Ni-sulfide ore potential of the massif.
F.A. Letnikov
Institute of the Earth's Crust, Siberian Branch of the RAS, 128 ul. Lermontova, Irkutsk, 664033, Russia
Keywords: Fluid, asthenosphere, Earth, core, plume, ore, lithosphere
Pages: 1271-1281 Subsection: FLUID REGIME AND MODELING OF ORE FORMATION PROCESSES
After the Earth had melted in the conditions of mostly reduced fluids, its chemistry included two distinct groups of light and heavy elements with high and low oxygen affinity, respectively. Light elements, with their density lower than in Fe but oxygen affinity higher than in FeO, accumulated in the essentially oxygenic sphere composed of silicates and oxides. Heavy elements with low oxygen affinity and native Fe sank to the Earth's center and formed the iron core. Thus the Earth's protomaterial partitioned to make an oxygen-free core where liquid iron stores enormous amounts of H2, CO, CH4, S, H2S, and other reduced gases surrounded by an almost 3000 km thick mantle in which the constituent minerals contain 75-80% oxygen. This separation of elements at the beginning of the Earth's history predetermined the specific behavior of fluids in all deep processes, including metallogeny, for the billions of years which followed. Self-organization of the Earth's upper layers by means of granite formation produced the crust. Having lost its granite-forming components, the mantle graded into solid depleted mantle underlain by non-depleted asthenosphere impregnated with fluids. The mineralizer capacity of asthenospheric fluid systems correlates with their T and P conditions and the related maturity of lithospheric blocks. Therefore, the deep-seated origin of mineral deposits stems from two feeding fluid super-systems, the core and the asthenosphere, each with its typical chemistry. The two sources produced the respective metallogenic provinces with the chemistry of deposits controlled by the causative mineralizer systems.
Fluid and melt inclusions in minerals from magmatic rocks and associated ores and metasomatites were studied. Based on the results obtained as well as on experimental data, possible evolution trends are considered for the phase composition of magmatogene fluids separating from granitoid and basic melts at different depths. Three types of fluids have been recognized according to their composition and phase state, which differ in metal contents: (1) homogeneous supercritical, (2) heterophase