From Geoscience Australia

How magnetotellurics data from multiscale surveys can help to image the footprint of mineral systems in covered terranes.

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Created 20/01/2025

Updated 20/01/2025

The footprint of a mineral system is potentially detectable at a range of scales and lithospheric depths, reflecting the size and distribution of its components. Magnetotellurics is one of a few techniques that can provide multiscale datasets to understand mineral systems. The Australian Lithospheric Architecture Magnetotelluric Project (AusLAMP) is a collaborative national survey that acquires long-period magnetotelluric data on a half-degree grid spacing (about 55 km) across Australia. This project aims to map the electrical conductivity/resistivity structure in the crust and mantle beneath the Australian continent. We have used AusLAMP as a first-order reconnaissance survey to resolve large-scale lithospheric architecture for mapping areas of mineral potential in Australia. AusLAMP results show a remarkable connection between conductive anomalies and giant mineral deposits in known highly endowed mineral provinces. Similar conductive features are mapped in greenfield areas where mineralisation has not been previously recognised. In these areas we can then undertake higher-resolution infill magnetotelluric surveys to refine the geometry of major structures, and to investigate if deep conductive structures are connected to the near surface by crustal-scale fluid-flow pathways.

We summarise the results from a 3D resistivity model derived from AusLAMP data in Northern Australia. This model reveals a broad conductivity anomaly in the lower crust and upper mantle that extends beneath an undercover exploration frontier between the producing Tennant Creek region and the prospective Murphy Province. This anomaly potentially represents a fertile source region for mineral systems. A subsequent higher-resolution infill magnetotelluric survey revealed two prominent conductors within the crust whose combined responses produced the lithospheric-scale conductivity anomaly mapped in the AusLAMP model. Integration of the conductivity structure with deep seismic reflection data revealed a favourable crustal architecture linking the lower, fertile source regions with potential depositional sites in the upper crust. Integration with other geophysical and geochronological datasets suggests high prospectivity for major mineral deposits in the vicinity of major faults.

This study demonstrates that the integration of geophysical data from multiscale surveys is an effective approach to scale reduction during mineral exploration in covered terranes. This Abstract was submitted to and presented at the 6th International Archean Symposium Target 2023, 28 July (https://6ias.org/target2023/)

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Title How magnetotellurics data from multiscale surveys can help to image the footprint of mineral systems in covered terranes.
Language eng
Licence notspecified
Landing Page https://devweb.dga.links.com.au/data/dataset/55105938-321b-482c-86a7-948db20ff0d5
Contact Point
Geoscience Australia
clientservices@ga.gov.au
Reference Period 01/03/2023
Geospatial Coverage {"type": "Polygon", "coordinates": [[[112.92, -54.75], [159.11, -54.75], [159.11, -9.2402], [112.92, -9.2402], [112.92, -54.75]]]}
Data Portal data.gov.au

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This dataset was originally found on data.gov.au "How magnetotellurics data from multiscale surveys can help to image the footprint of mineral systems in covered terranes.". Please visit the source to access the original metadata of the dataset:
https://devweb.dga.links.com.au/data/dataset/how-magnetotellurics-data-from-multiscale-surveys-can-help-to-image-the-footprint-of-mineral-sy

No duplicate datasets found.