Re: ...Best Map Ever
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Jun 28, 2009 02:52AM
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A synthesis of the aeromagnetic data (Fig. 3) reveals several important features: 1. The most striking feature on the aeromagnetic maps ( McRitchie, 1971 c; Hetu and Holman, 1995; GSC, 1988, for the Bissett area only) are discontinuous strings of linear, very strong positive anomalies along the northern and eastern margin of the Rice Lake belt, northwest of Bissett along the Wanipigow River, in the Wallace Lake-Siderock Lake area and between Moore Lake and Garner Lake. They are caused by oxide facies banded iron-formation. The absence of similar anomalies elsewhere in the supracrustal belt sets these sedimentary and the associated rocks apart from the remainder of the belt. As described below these iron-formations and the associated rocks are part of a pre-2.8 Ga platformal assemblage, predating and largely in fault contact with the younger dominantly volcanogenic assemblages of the Rice Lake Group. 2. A second order of regional, but lower amplitude, positive anomalies marks the larger younger (
<
2.73 Ga) granitic intrusions in the greenstone belt and the
metasedimentary gneiss belt to the south. Particularly their margins are magnetically defined, e. g. the belt-central Ross River pluton, because of contrasts with adjacent volcanic rocks. 3. Strings of distinctly oval positive anomalies along the northern margin of the belt between Lake Winnipeg and Bissett are caused by serpentinites. These are spatially associated with the Wanipigow Fault. The textures of these bodies do not definitively indicate their origin but it is possible that they represent komatiites which have been tectonically re-intruded along late fault structures. 4. A large strong magnetic anomaly in the Garner Lake area is caused by the Garner Lake layered mafic/ultramafic intrusion. 5. A feature that is particularly noticeable on the
1:20,000 map (GSC, 1988)
is the
weakening, or disappearance, of positive magnetic anomalies in a northerly trending strip, extending from approximately 5 km west of Bissett to the eastern shore of Rice Lake. This termination appears to be in part related to the disappearance (or discontinuity) of iron formation, but the regional feature may be an expression of the breakdown of magnetite during impregnation with reducing fluids. There is some
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