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Browning, Timothy D., Beske-Diehl, Suzanne J. (1987) Paleomagnetism and the age of copper mineralization in the Portage Lake Volcanics, Upper Peninsula, Michigan. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 24 (12) 2396-2404 doi:10.1139/e87-225

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Reference TypeJournal (article/letter/editorial)
TitlePaleomagnetism and the age of copper mineralization in the Portage Lake Volcanics, Upper Peninsula, Michigan
JournalCanadian Journal of Earth Sciences
AuthorsBrowning, Timothy D.Author
Beske-Diehl, Suzanne J.Author
Year1987 (December 1)Volume24
Issue12
PublisherCanadian Science Publishing
DOIdoi:10.1139/e87-225Search in ResearchGate
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Mindat Ref. ID479364Long-form Identifiermindat:1:5:479364:3
GUID0
Full ReferenceBrowning, Timothy D., Beske-Diehl, Suzanne J. (1987) Paleomagnetism and the age of copper mineralization in the Portage Lake Volcanics, Upper Peninsula, Michigan. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 24 (12) 2396-2404 doi:10.1139/e87-225
Plain TextBrowning, Timothy D., Beske-Diehl, Suzanne J. (1987) Paleomagnetism and the age of copper mineralization in the Portage Lake Volcanics, Upper Peninsula, Michigan. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 24 (12) 2396-2404 doi:10.1139/e87-225
In(1987, December) Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences Vol. 24 (12) Canadian Science Publishing
Abstract/Notes The close association of hematite with native copper in the flow tops of the Portage Lake Volcanics invites the opportunity to establish the relative age of copper mineralization. For this purpose, we sampled 12 paleomagnetic sites representing six mineralized flow tops and their associated massive interiors on the Keweenaw Peninsula in Michigan. Three of the four less-altered flow interiors contained two components of magnetization: one was carried by primary magnetite, and therefore the other, carried by hematite, must be secondary. The hematite component was parallel to the single hematite component in the associated flow top, indicating that both components had a common secondary origin. The low between-site dispersion of the hematite component and the similarity of the mean direction to primary directions of other rocks of the same age (1100 Ma) suggest that hematization occurred over a period of time long enough to average out secular variation but before deposition of the overlying Nonesuch Shale, extensive tectonic tilting, and significant apparent polar wander. If copper mineralization and hematization were contemporaneous, then we have also dated the relative age of copper mineralization and the associated metamorphism. In contrast, paleomagnetic results from the two extensively altered flows (from below the Greenstone flow) are consistent with the mechanism of deuteric or auto-oxidation.


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