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  • 1
    Series available for loan
    Series available for loan
    Ottawa : Geological Survey of Canada
    Associated volumes
    Call number: SR 90.0008(68-32)
    In: Paper
    Type of Medium: Series available for loan
    Pages: VI, 30 S. + 2 pl.
    Series Statement: Paper / Geological Survey of Canada 68-32
    Language: English
    Location: Lower compact magazine
    Branch Library: GFZ Library
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  • 2
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Aumento, Fabrizio; Lawrence, D E; Plant, A G (1968): The Ferro-manganese Pavement On San Pablo Seamount. Geological Survey of Canada, 68-32, 30 pp
    Publication Date: 2023-08-28
    Description: The Bedford Institute of Oceanography provided ship time on the C.S.S. Hudson during the B.I.0. 1967 Metrology and IODAL Cruise for surveying two separate bottom features in the North Atlantic; the Flemish Cap and the San Pablo Seamount one of the Kelvin Seamounts (also known as the New England Seamounts) about 400 miles SSE of Halifax, Nova Scotia. Underwater photography, dredging, and drilling showed San Pablo seamount to have a very considerable covering of manganese deposit, which may be recoverable by mining. San Pablo Seamount was surveyed and sampled; good hauls were made both on the top and on the slopes, at various depths from 500-1000 fathoms; in all cases samples of an unusual stratified manganese-iron ore were recovered. In the hope of gaining additional information in the immediate sample area, one of the dredges had been previously modified to accommodate underwater photographic equipment. X-ray chemical analyses indicate that the ore contains 20 to 25 per cent MnO2, with similar amounts of Fe2O3. Since bottom photographs indicate that these deposits form a continuous cover 1 foot to 3 feet thick over most of the seamount, it is estimated that there are ore reserves in the order of 10 to 30 M tons above 1,000 fathoms.
    Keywords: Aluminium; Arsenic; Bacteria, saprophyte; Barium; Boron; Calcium; Cobalt; Copper; DEPTH, sediment/rock; Description; Dredge; DRG; Elevation of event; HUD67/19; HUD67/19-54; Hudson; Insoluble residue; Iron; Latitude of event; Lead; Longitude of event; Loss on ignition; Magnesium; Manganese; Molybdenum; Nickel; NOAA and MMS Marine Minerals Geochemical Database; NOAA-MMS; Potassium; Sample ID; San Pablo Seamount; Scandium; Silicon; Strontium; Titanium; Vanadium; Wet chemistry; X-ray fluorescence (XRF); Ytterbium; Yttrium; Zinc; Zirconium
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 112 data points
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  • 3
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Aumento, Fabrizio; Lawrence, D E; Plant, A G (1968): The Ferro-manganese Pavement On San Pablo Seamount. Geological Survey of Canada, 68-32, 30 pp
    Publication Date: 2023-08-28
    Description: The Bedford Institute of Oceanography provided ship time on the C.S.S. Hudson during the B.I.0. 1967 Metrology and IODAL Cruise for surveying two separate bottom features in the North Atlantic; the Flemish Cap and the San Pablo Seamount one of the Kelvin Seamounts (also known as the New England Seamounts) about 400 miles SSE of Halifax, Nova Scotia. Underwater photography, dredging, and drilling showed San Pablo seamount to have a very considerable covering of manganese deposit, which may be recoverable by mining. San Pablo Seamount was surveyed and sampled; good hauls were made both on the top and on the slopes, at various depths from 500-1000 fathoms; in all cases samples of an unusual stratified manganese-iron ore were recovered. In the hope of gaining additional information in the immediate sample area, one of the dredges had been previously modified to accommodate underwater photographic equipment. X-ray chemical analyses indicate that the ore contains 20 to 25 per cent MnO2, with similar amounts of Fe2O3. Since bottom photographs indicate that these deposits form a continuous cover 1 foot to 3 feet thick over most of the seamount, it is estimated that there are ore reserves in the order of 10 to 30 M tons above 1,000 fathoms.
    Keywords: Deposit type; DEPTH, sediment/rock; Dredge; DRG; Elevation of event; HUD67/19; HUD67/19-54; Hudson; Latitude of event; Longitude of event; NOAA and MMS Marine Minerals Geochemical Database; NOAA-MMS; Position; Quantity of deposit; Sample ID; San Pablo Seamount; Size
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 9 data points
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  • 4
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Contributions to mineralogy and petrology 78 (1981), S. 12-20 
    ISSN: 1432-0967
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract Clasts of shocked garnet-sillimanite gneisses comprise a minor fraction of the allochthonous breccia at the Haughton impact structure. Refractive indices of the diaplectic and fused components of the gneisses, and reduced specific gravity indicate shock pressures from 35 to 55±5 GPa and effective post-shock temperatures from 500° to 1,000° C in a suite of selected samples. Sillimanites remain birefringent but display several effects of shock metamorphism. Shock-produced planar features and planar fractures are highly developed; optic axial angle (2V y ) increases from near normal (26°) to over 80° within a sample; there is a reduction in optical relief and a development of a pale brown colouring which generally deepens in shade as shock level increases. There is no unambiguous evidence, optically or from X-ray investigation, of a high-pressure Al2SiO5 polymorph or breakdown to mullite and silica. The highly shocked sillimanites have anomalous K2O contents from 0.11% to 0.92%. Potassium appears to substitute for aluminum and, to a lesser degree, for iron while retaining sillimanite stoichiometry, and the amount of substitution generally reflects increased shock level. The source of the contributed potassium is the coexisting shock-fused feldspar glass. The glass of each sample is derived primarily from melted alkali feldspar with a minor and varied admixture from the breakdown of mafic minerals. The glasses are depleted in K2O, although Na2O is unaffected, and the extent of depletion can be correlated with the increased K2O content of the associated sillimanite. The incorporation of potassium in shocked sillimanites is a function of both degree of shock deformation and availability of potassium from other coexisting shocked phases. It is speculated that the brown colouration is a function of ferrous iron content and may reflect post-crater thermal history rather than shock level.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 5
    ISSN: 1432-0967
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract The composition of the sampled melt rocks at the 22 km diameter E. Clearwater impact structure indicates the presence of ∼8% C-1 material. The meteoritic component is fractionated with refractory siderophiles, up to 30 times C-1 abundances, concentrated in ten to hundred micron-sized, magnetic particles. These particles consist of the Ni-sulphide, millerite, and what is assumed to be a mixture of refractory silicates and magnetite with grain sizes of 〈1 μm. The larger particles have a core-rim structure with millerite and occasionally very minor galena and possibly pentlandite in the core. An origin as a combination of altered meteoritic metal and condensed meteoritic silicate is favored for the origin of the siderophile-rich particles. If 8% meteoritic material is taken as the average meteoritic contamination in the melt, then the E. Clearwater projectile may have impacted with a velocity of 17 km s−1. Peak shock pressures would have been of the order of 300 GPa, sufficient to vaporize the silicate component but only melt the metal component of the projectile. As the meteoritic material was being driven down into vaporized/ melted target rocks during the initial stages of impact, the melted Fe, Ni metal underwent oxidation, Fe was removed, and meteoritic silicate material recondensed on the cooler, essentially Ni metal. As cavity excavation proceeded, these Ni metal, silicate-oxide particles were incorporated in the melt, their refractory nature prevented thermal digestion and sulphur in the melt reacted with the metal to produce millerite on final equilibration. If this hypothesis is correct, it suggests that the E. Clearwater projectile was a C-2 or C-3 chondrite, both of which are compatible with the trace element composition of the melt rocks. Clearwater Lake is a twin impact structure formed by an asteroid pair. It is still not clear, however, what type of projectile formed the 32 km diameter western structure, where the surface melt rocks contain no identifiable meteoritic signature.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 6
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Contributions to mineralogy and petrology 46 (1974), S. 81-97 
    ISSN: 1432-0967
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract Glass from the West Clearwater Lake hypervelocity impact crater contains numerous spheroids, 10 to 500 μm across, which appear to have formed at high temperatures as fluids immiscible in the enclosing melt. The spheroids are distinguished from small, normal, largely void gas vesicles, which are also present, by being completely filled in all cases; by having fillings which vary in composition from spheroid to spheroid, even between spheroids in close association; and by indications that the present fillings are representative of the contents present before the matrix melt chilled. Most of the spheroids are classified petrographically into three types. Type I, the most numerous, includes all spheroids〉100 μm and are filled with uncommon pale brown to yellow montmorillonites with an unusual structure intermediate between dioctahedral montmorillonite and saponite. Type II, brown and green, are filled with Fe-rich montmorillonites, while Type III are aluminia-rich montmorillonites crystallized into mica-like sheaves. Rare, small spheroids are filled with calcite or silica. In a few cases one spheroid encloses another of similar or different type. Electron microprobe analyses indicate that with few exceptions Types I and III spheroids belong to a Mg series of montmorillonites in which the main chemical variation is the substitution of Mg for Al. A second Fe-K series includes Type II and a few Type I spheroids and shows substitution of Fe by Al, relatively high K2O and, in the alumina-rich members, low SiO2. The close association of spheroids with deformed, embayed lechatelierite inclusions indicates that they formed while the latter were liquid, i.e. at temperatures above 1700°C, as rapidly moving impact melt engulfed highly shocked inclusions of quartz-bearing country rock. The preservation of spheroids in the West Clearwater Lake glass is attributed mainly to the position of the glass masses within the breccias lining the crater floor. It is considered that the glass in this location did not achieve free flight but, as part of a large mass, cooled relatively slowly through the high temperature regime in which the spheroids were generated, and then, when detached, chilled rapidly to preserve a record of this transient stage in their history.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 7
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    New York, NY [u.a.] : Wiley-Blackwell
    X-Ray Spectrometry 12 (1983), S. 59-66 
    ISSN: 0049-8246
    Keywords: Chemistry ; Analytical Chemistry and Spectroscopy
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Physics
    Notes: A serpentine mineral specimen used for a standard in a Materials Analysis Company Model 400 electron microprobe equipped with a Kevex Model 5000A energy dispersive sperctrometer and an on-line Hewlett-Packard 2100 computer, was repeatedly analysed during a study of serpentinization. The results of the repeated analyses were statistically analysed and show an acceptable level of accuracy and precision. The relative and absolute errors for the serpentine standard lie within the same ranges as the errors for the other standards (forsterite, enstatite, diopside, kyanite and kaersutite) used, although the standard deviations for the serpentine analyses are slightly greater. These results are within acceptable limits and indicate that serpentine can be routinely analysed by energy dispersed analysis, using a serpentine standard for magnesium and silicon determinations, with the same accuracy but with slightly lower precision than less hydrous silicates. Most elements were present in amounts between 2 to 63 wt% of the oxide in the standards used but 0.31 wt% Al2O3 present in the serpentine standard was routinely determined with acceptable results.
    Additional Material: 8 Ill.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2016-07-09
    Print ISSN: 0008-4476
    Topics: Geosciences
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 1972-03-01
    Print ISSN: 0008-4077
    Electronic ISSN: 1480-3313
    Topics: Geosciences
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 1979-11-01
    Print ISSN: 0008-4077
    Electronic ISSN: 1480-3313
    Topics: Geosciences
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