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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    Antarctic sea ice and its interactions with high latitude weather and climate
    Watkins, Andrew Bruce ( 1998)
    Antarctic sea ice plays a major role in the earth system by greatly influencing the high latitude exchanges of heat, moisture and momentum between the ocean and atmosphere, as well as profoundly effecting the salt budget of the ocean, and thus the production of Antarctic Bottom Water, one of the driving mechanisms of worldwide oceanic circulation. With such considerable and far reaching impact, it is important to document its climatology, understand its variability and quantify its influence. Climatologies and trends of the Southern Ocean sea ice pack are presented using the most recent satellite observations available from the Defense Meteorological Program’s (DMSP) Special Sensor Microwave Imager (SSM/I). The analysis of these data show that Antarctic sea ice is highly variable in both time and space. Statistically significant increases in the sea ice extent, open water and ice areas have been determined from the SSM/I data for the 9 year period 1987 to 1996, a result which differs from the Scanning Multichannel Microwave Radiometer (SMMR) observations (1978-1987). The increasing trend in the SSM/I observations can be attributed to the large increases in sea ice observed in 1994-1995, as confirmed by an analysis of data from the ERS-1 satellite. The mean season length during these years has remained relatively unchanged. Regional trends, both in the sea ice concentration and in season length, showed vast spatial inhomogeneity. SSM/I data displayed increasing season length in the central Weddell Sea, Bellingshausen Sea and Balleny Islands regions, with decreasing length in the Amundsen Sea, eastern Ross Sea and in the coastal areas off Wilkes Land. Similar trends are observed in the seasonal sea ice concentration. In most cases, these trends are opposite to those observed in the SMMR data, which may be linked to the shift observed in the Amundsen Sea low after 1990. Comparisons with historical data would suggest that no large scale anomalous change has occurred in the Antarctic sea ice limits over the course of human observation. Furthermore, the degree of variability suggests great care is needed in interpreting large scale changes in sea ice conditions, and hence atmospheric or oceanic change, from locally observed anomalies. Case studies of the effect of individual cyclones upon the sea ice concentration show small but definite modification of the ice conditions. To further diagnose aspects of the thermodynamic and dynamic forcing upon the Antarctic pack, detailed analysis of the sea ice concentration variability has been conducted using spectral techniques, and the spectra have been compared to those of the European Centre for Medium Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF) temperature and wind data. In all cases, and with the seasonal cycle removed, the sea ice concentration shows a bias towards longer timescales of variability than either the wind stress or surface air temperature. This “red shift” in its frequency spectrum is strongest with the wind stress, and weakest with the temperature. For longer period waves, this may be due to the formation of new ice by surface cooling or the moderation of melting by the cold surface water, whereas for shorter period waves, where wind stress dominates temperature and ice concentration respectively, time is required for winds to draw in warmer or cooler air, as well as to overcome the ice masses inertia and keel friction to open or close leads. Strong intraseasonal variability of the sea ice concentration is observed in the 20-25 day period, reflecting similar timescales of the temperature variability, as well as that of the energetic eddies of the Antarctic circumpolar current. Examination of the latitudinal variation of the sea ice concentration, temperature and wind stress spectra showed not only the importance of the north-south temperature gradient in influencing the variability, but also the seasonal changes in the semi annual oscillation of the circumpolar trough. Regional spectra showed clear differences between location, and reflected the influences of the atmosphere and ocean upon the sea ice pack. This is clearly shown in the Weddell Polynya region and off East Antarctica, with high variability in the synoptic timescales, and in the western Ross Sea where changes occur in timescales of greater than 20 days. In order to determine if satellite derived, real time sea ice concentration and distribution would be of benefit to operational numerical weather prediction (NWP) schemes, the effect of sea ice concentration change upon the atmosphere in synoptic timescales was examined using a general circulation model in conjunction with the Australian Bureau of Meteorology’s GASP analyses. Experiments were conducted with a typical July sea ice concentration and distribution, as well as slab concentrations of 0, 10, 25, 50, 80 and 100%. Results from 5-day numerical weather forecasts show that the central pressure, structure and tracks of individual cyclones are sensitive to the ‘switch on’ of different sea ice conditions. Composites of all forecasts made with each concentration showed considerable, and mostly statistically significant, anomalies in the surface temperatures and turbulent heat fluxes over the sea ice. The magnitudes of these changes varied monotonically with the area of open water. The largest changes were simulated closest to the coast for all concentrations except for the typical July sea ice run, which displayed maxima over the outer pack. Significant westerly anomalies were induced over the ice in all cases, as were reductions in mean sea level pressure. The July sea ice runs displayed a distribution of the mean sea level pressure anomaly different from all others, with maxima occurring in the central to outer pack. All other forecasts displayed maxima at the coast. The results suggest that sea ice concentration does induce anomalies in the atmospheric parameters in timescales of less than five days. Further, the use of a realistic distribution of sea ice concentration produces results distinct from the constant concentration forecasts. Hence it is suggested that real time Antarctic sea ice data may be of considerable benefit to numerical weather prediction models.
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    Investigations into diamond drilling and rock drillability: microscale and fullscale impregnated bits
    Siribumrungsukha, Boonsom ( 1980)
    Drill bits having cutting edges formed of a matrix of sintered metal powder impregnated with diamond bort (the so called "impregnated" diamond bits) have the potential to greatly increase the economy of diamond drilling, due to low production costs and long bit life resulting from reconditioning of the cutting edges. However, little detailed research into the performance of impregnated bits has been conducted, and the capacity to predict their field behaviour is limited. As a contribution to the knowledge of impregnated bit performance, this project has studied basic relationships between thrust, rotational speed and the penetration of diamond bits into rock, with particular attention paid to the development of techniques suitable for laboratory testing using miniature impregnated bits. A conventional bench drill and a radial arm drill were modified and instrumented to enable operating conditions to be controlled and drilling parameters to be measured and monitored, for microscale and fullscale drilling using impregnated drill bits. Bit performance and drilling characteristics were studied for four rock types, and rock drillability studies were carried out on seven rock types. Statistical relationships between penetration rate, specific energy, torque and drilling distance that were determined enable projection of drilling data from a standard "sharp" condition. A wear measuring device was developed to assess matrix wear of the impregnated microbits. Reconditioning was done by drilling medium-strength, abrasive Stawell sandstone. Initial penetration rate increases linearly with increases in thrust and/or rotational speed, but only within a limited range, depending on rock type and the other operating parameters. Matrix contact with the rock surface, "clogging" of the diamonds, time-dependency, and strength of diamonds and the diamond-matrix bond play important roles in these phenomena. Comparison of rock drillability between that of microscale and fullscale bits shows a straight-line relationship indicating the possibility to predict drilling performance in the field. Uniaxial compressive strength, tensile strength, and Sklerograf hardness can be used as a preliminary, but not reliable guide, to predict drillability. Petrographic characteristics and the relative scale of diamond size to grain size of minerals affect rock drillability.
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    The major, trace and precious metal geochemistry of some Permian layered intrusions, Central Queensland
    Reeves, Shane John ( 1990)
    The Bucknalla Complex, previously known as the Westwood Layered Intrusion, is a small, 10 km2, layered, tholeiitic, mafic-ultramafic intrusion located 50 km southwest of Rockhampton that was emplaced into an active continental margin environment in the Permian. The complex comprises clinopyroxenites, olivine clinopyroxenites, wehrlites, troctolites, hornblende gabbros, gabbros, anorthosites, leucogabbros and dolerites. It is a saucer-shaped lopolith (2200 m X 6 km at maximum stratigraphic intersection) which intruded Lower Permian spilitic pillow lavas, cherts and tuffs of the Rookwood Volcanics during the Lower Permian. It has subsequently been tilted vertically and in a northeast direction. It consists of over 15 laterally discontinuous igneous units ranging in thickness from 1-50 m. Plagioclase is a cumulus phase throughout the intrusion while orthopyroxene is absent until the very uppermost levels of the stratigraphy. The chromium composition of magnetite analysed by electron microprobe has been found to mimic whole-rock mg# and is a good measure of the degree of fractionation of the rocks. Electron microprobe analyses of samples from two traverses perpendicular to layering reveal cryptic variation in the primary phases (olivine: Fo69-83; plagioclase: An54-97; clinopyroxene mg#: Cpx67-87) which is not a simple function of stratigraphic height. Background PPGE (Pd & Pt), Au, S and Cu values for the intrusion are high while IPGE (Ir & Ru) are low. A total of 120 analyses has produced the following range of values: Pd, 2-70 ppb; Pt, 3-40 ppb; Au, 1-20 ppb; Ir, 0.01-0.07 ppb; Ru, 0.2-0.6 ppb; S, 150-400 ppm and Cu, 40-600 ppm. Platinum, Pd and Au display good correlations with Cu, particularly at more elevated levels, while Ir and Ru are better correlated with whole rock Ni and Cr. Palladium, Pt, Au, Cu & S are elevated in rocks which have intermediate whole-rock mg# (47-60). These trends suggest that the PGE are, to some extent, controlled by fractionation and that the high melting point PGEs (Ir, Ru) were precipitated with the early crystallising phases, such as olivine and clinopyroxene, whereas Pt, Pd and Au were removed from the magma by sulphides. Mantle normalized metal plots for both the mineralized and unmineralized rocks of the Bucknalla Complex display similar trends. Both plots display the anomalous low Ir content, PPGE enrichment and the clear control of sulphides on the distribution of the PGEs and Au. The ratio Pd/Ir is extremely high (1800-9300) indicating extreme fractionation of the PGEs. These trends may, in part, reflect PGE abundances inherited from the source (i.e. relatively low degrees of partial melting) but were exaggerated by the extraction of the IPGE during the early stages of fractional crystallization and by the precipitation of a PPGE-enriched sulphide component. The Complex is known to host minor Pd-Pt-Au-Cu mineralization, disseminated throughout the intrusion. The mineralization consists of chalcopyrite and bornite and their alteration products digenite and covellite, electrum (Au-Ag alloy), Pd-As, Pd-Sb, Pd-S, michenerite (PdBiTe2) and sperrylite (PtAs2). A common host rock is olivine gabbro and the silicate minerals are generally fresh. The mineralization is considered to be primary magmatic for a number of reasons, foremost of which are (i) the clear association of the PGMs with intercumulus (magmatic-textured) fresh or relict Cu-sulphides and (ii) a continuum in Pd/Pt, Cu/Pd, and Cu/Pt ratios from background to mineralized samples which strongly suggests that the processes responsible for the enhanced PGE content of the Bucknalla Complex were also responsible for mineralization. In as much as the former must have been produced by magmatic processes it is concluded that the higher grade PGE-Cu-S mineralization was also caused by primary magmatic processes. A model is proposed in which mineralization is sporadically generated by influxes of small batches of PGE-rich S-undersaturated magma into a magma chamber in which the resident magma has reached S-saturation due to fractional crystallization processes. Other intrusions in the region, namely; the Eulogie Park Complex, the Fred Creek intrusion and the Boogargan intrusion, are not considered prospective for stratiform PGE mineralization due to their low background PGE tenor, low Pd/S and Pd/Se ratios and high S contents.
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    Studies in Victorian Tertiary foraminifera neogene planktonic faunas
    Mallett, Clifford William ( 1977)
    Planktonic foraminiferal faunas are described for the interval late Early Miocene to the Pleistocene, in the Tertiary basins along the southern margin of Victoria, including the Otway Basin, the Port Phillip Embayment, and the Gippsland Basin. Ninety-two foraminiferal taxa are identified. The faunas are dominated in the Early Miocene by globigerinid and globigerinoidid species, by unkeeled globorotalids in the Middle Miocene, and by keeled globorotalids for most of the Late Miocene. Unkeeled globorotalids are again important in the Early Pliocene, but keeled species again reappear in the Late Pliocene and the Early Pleistocene. One Pleistocene, two Pliocene, two Late Miocene, and two Middle Miocene planktonic foraminiferal zones are recognised on the first appearance of the following species: Orbulina suturalis, Globorotalia mayeri, Globorotalia acostaensis, Globorotalia conomiozea, Globorotalia puncticulata, Globorotalia viola, Globorotalia truncatulinoides. Subzones are identified by the extinction of Globorotalia peripheroronda, and by the appearance of Globigerina nepenthes and Globorotalia plesiotumida. Foraminiferal datum levels are used to correlate the Victorian sections with the Italian stratotype sections, the New Zealand late Tertiary, and the N-zonation of Blow, and hence into the palaeomagnetic and radiometric time scales. In the Tertiary basins, the maximum extent of marine deposition occurred in the Early Miocene, and despite subsequent sea level falls, continuous marine deposition is found through the Middle Miocene and most of the Late Miocene in the Otway Basin and the Port Phillip Embayment. Shallowing within the Middle Miocene is reflected by breaks in the Gippsland Basin sections, and lithological changes in other basins. A major sea withdrawal occurred near the top of the Miocene. Small scattered Pliocene deposits indicate short high sea level phases at the base of the Pliocene, in the middle of the Pliocene, and about the Pliocene - Pleistocene boundary.
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    Altitudinal distribution of vegetation in the headwaters of the Wongungarra River, Victoria
    WATSON, FRED ( 1993)
    Changes in vegetation composition with respect to altitude were investigated in the sclerophyllous forests of the Australian mountain region. Vegetation was surveyed at 148 sites along two transects which were located to maximise variation in altitude and minimise the influence of environmental factors not directly related to altitude. The measurement, simulation, and estimation of environmental variables revealed that this aim was met except at the end-points of the transects where secondary influences are present.
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    The geology and geochemistry of the Agnew Intrusion: implications for the petrogenesis of early Huronian mafic igneous rocks in Central Ontario, Canada
    Vogel, Derek Christian ( 1996-07)
    The Early Proterozoic Agnew Intrusion is a well-preserved leucogabbronoritic to gabbronoritic layered intrusion that is a member of the East Bull Lake suite of layered intrusions (ca. 2490-2470 Ma) occurring in central Ontario. These intrusions are related to the development of the Huronian Rift Zone, which may be part of a much more widespread rifting event that involved the Fennoscandian Shield. Structural data suggest that these intrusions have been subjected to ductile deformation and are erosional remnants of one or more sill-like bodies originally emplaced along the contact between Archaean granitic rocks of the Superior Province and an Early Proterozoic Huronian continental flood basalt sequence in the Southern Province.
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    The development of a high quality historical temperature data base for Australia
    Torok, Simon James ( 1996)
    A high quality, historical surface air temperature data set is essential for the reliable investigation of climate change and variability. In this study, such a data set has been prepared for Australia by adjusting raw mean annual temperature data for inhomogeneities associated with station relocations, changes in exposure, and other problems. Temperature records from long-term stations were collaborated from the set of all raw data held by the Australian Bureau of Meteorology. These long-term records were extended by combining stations and manually entering previously unused archived temperature measurements. An objective procedure was developed to determine the necessary adjustments, in conjunction with complementary statistical methods and station history documentation. The objective procedure involved creating a reference time series for each long-term station, from the median values at surrounding, well-correlated stations. Time series of annual mean maximum and mean minimum temperatures have been produced for 224 stations, and the adjusted dataset has been made available to the research community. The adjusted data are likely to be more representative of real climatic variations than raw data due to the removal of discontinuities. The adjusted data set has been compared with previously used temperature data sets, and data sets of other parameters. The adjusted data set provides adequate spatial coverage of Australia back to 1910. Additional adjusted data are available prior to this date at many stations. Trends in annual mean maximum, minimum, the mean of the maximum and minimum, and the range between the maximum and minimum, have been calculated at each site. Maximum and minimum temperatures have increased since about 1950, with minimum temperatures increasing faster than maximum temperatures.
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    Mineralogy, geochemistry and origin of the Kalgoorlie gold deposits, Western Australia
    Golding, Lee Yvonne ( 1978)
    Rich gold-telluride lodes (steeply dipping and flatly dipping) and minor gold-quartz stockwork mineralization characterize the Kalgoorlie gold-field. The origin of these gold deposits, the relationship between deposits and then nature of the host rocks are the major problems considered in this thesis. Extensive diamond drilling at the essentially unmineralized southern end of the field provided excellent material for stratigraphic studies and for country rock analysis whilst ore samples were obtained from both mines and drill core.
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    Leachate chemistry of two modern municipal waste landfills in Melbourne, Victoria
    Strudwick, Darryl Grant ( 1999-11)
    This study investigates the occurrence and chemical composition of leachate at Clayton South and Brooklyn Municipal waste landfills in Melbourne, Victoria. Both are ‘modern’ municipal waste landfills, being engineered and managed consistent with current regulatory requirements. These landfills accept only putrescible and solid inert waste, but not soluble chemical, hazardous, liquid or prescribed industrial waste. (For complete abstract open document) Analyses of an extensive range of chemical parameters reveals a complex mixture of inorganic and organic compounds, similar to those of international authors researching leachate chemistry. Dominant ions in these leachates are NH4+, Na+, HC03- and Cl-. Except for Fe, heavy metals are not present in significant concentrations (mostly