School of Earth Sciences - Theses

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    The geology, petrology and geochemistry of the granitic rocks of Victoria
    Rossiter, Allan G. (University of Melbourne, 1973)
    In the field the granitic rocks of Victoria show a wide variety of characteristics but chemically all are related and are the result of similar processes that occurred cyclically during the Palaeozoic. The granites may be divided into two groups on the basis of whether or not primary hornblende is present in the more basic members of the suite. Rocks of the hornblende-free series concentrate mainly in central Victoria and usually contain biotite that is red-brown in colour. In the granites of the hornblende-bearing group green-brown biotite is generally present. The two different colours appear to indicate unlike oxygen fugacities in the magmas from which the micas crystallized. The rocks of the hornblende-bearing and hornblende-free provinces also vary slightly in chemistry - the most important difference being that the basic members of the first group contain slightly more Ca than those of the second having comparable silica content. The compositions of the Victorian granites is consistent with their derivation by anatexis of a mixture of basic igneous rocks and sedimentary material. The conclusion is drawn that a combination of Cambrian basalts and dolerites and Cambro-Ordovician sediments constitute the source. The explanation of the fact that two chemical trends are observed in the granites may lie in the possible existence of two chemically distinct groups in the Cambrian igneous rocks - the one having lower Ca predominating under central Victoria.
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    Geology of the Dookie District (Part I) & Trace element distributions within some major stratiform orebodies (Part II)
    Smith, Robert Neville ( 1973)
    Part I: The Cambrian rocks outcropping in the Dookie district consist of a series of altered igneous rocks (diabases), a variety of pyroclastic rocks and cherts. The igneous rocks are thought to have been originally tholeiitic, having undergone low grade burial metamorphism, hydrothermal alteration and possibly contact metamorphism. Field evidence indicates that at least one of the igneous bodies is intrusive, probably a sill. The relation between these rocks and Cambrian rocks elsewhere in Victoria is discussed. The lithology and structure of an area of folded Ordovician and Silurian — L. Devonian sediments outcropping to the south of the main Cambrian massif is reviewed. Part II: Trace elements Tl, Ag and Au abundances in whole rock samples from a number of important stratiform basemetal orebodies have been determined by neutron activation analysis. Suites of samples were taken from the HYC Zn-Pb-Ag deposit at McArthur River, N.T., the Cu-Pb-Zn deposit of Rosebery, Tasmania and a Karoko type orebody from Shakanai, Japan. While the distribution of Au and Ag in the three deposits were found to closely follow those of Cu and Pb respectively, a higher Ag/Au ratio is apparent in the HYC deposit. In the other deposits, probably formed at temperatures greater than 200°, high concentrations of Au are explainable in terms of high temperature transport via chloride or thiocomplexing, while in the HYC deposit, formed below 150°, hydrothermal transport of comparable amounts of Au is considered unlikely. In response to lower temperature, strongly reducing conditions and restricted circulation, Tl concentrations in the HYC deposit are markedly greater than those in the remaining deposits. At McArthur River, significant enrichments in Tl occur up to, 250 metres stratigraphically above the main ore shales, and the geochemical significance and practical value of such metal haloes about stratiform orebodies are discussed.