Seismic reflection imaging over a massive sulfide deposit at the Matagami mining camp, Québec

Geophysics ◽  
1999 ◽  
Vol 64 (1) ◽  
pp. 24-32 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrew J. Calvert ◽  
Yexu Li

A 2-D seismic reflection profile was shot across the southern flank of the Matagami mining camp, almost directly above the recently discovered Bell Allard massive sulfide deposit, now estimated at more than 6 million metric tons. All orebodies found in the southern part of the mining camp, including Bell Allard, are located at the contact between the primarily basaltic Wabassee Group and the underlying rhyolitic Watson Lake Group. Seismic reflections were recorded from the basalt‐rhyolite contacts of the lower Wabassee Group, as well as from gabbro sills that intrude much of the volcanic stratigraphy. A strong reflection from the top of the Bell Allard orebody was also detected, but the reflection does not extend over the full width of the deposit as defined by drilling, appearing to correlate with the lower pyrite‐rich zone. Faulting, which can be interpreted from discontinuities in the observed reflections, probably controlled the formation of the Bell Allard deposit. If the interpreted gabbro sills are accepted as isotime markers, then faulting of the deeper sill complex defines a series of half grabens within the rhyolitic Watson Lake Group. The Bell Allard deposit is found at the intersection of one of these apparently low‐angle normal faults with the top of the Watson Lake Group, indicating that sulfide mineralization may have been associated with fluid flow along the fault, which likely penetrates to the underlying mafic intrusion. Although the precise geometry of subsurface faulting cannot be estimated from a single 2-D seismic profile, these results indicate that a full 3-D seismic survey should allow the mapping of many of the subsurface fault systems and the verification of hypotheses of fault‐controlled deposit formation.

Geophysics ◽  
1998 ◽  
Vol 63 (2) ◽  
pp. 379-391 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gervais Perron ◽  
Andrew J. Calvert

Volcanic rocks in, and around, the Ansil mining camp host a large number of massive sulfide mineral deposits. A high‐resolution seismic reflection profile was shot across the camp with the objective of mapping the contacts between the different volcanic units at which most of the ore bodies have been found. Numerous exploration boreholes define the geology to a depth of 1600 m and allow a precise comparison with the recorded reflections. Geophysical logs obtained in one deep borehole suggest that reflection coefficients between the andesite‐rhyolite units of the volcanic stratigraphy are around 0.05, but few corresponding reflections can be identified in the seismic data. Those reflections in the surface seismic profile that can be correlated with the subsurface geology originate from diorite sills, at which reflection coefficients are between 0.05 and 0.11. We suggest that reflections are observed from the diorite sills because the sills were intruded as sheets, some along fault planes, resulting in interfaces that extend over an area much greater than the first Fresnel zone. The contacts between the rhyolite‐andesite volcanic units may be highly variable spatially, preventing any strong reflection response, in contrast to the results of 1-D synthetic seismograms calculated from the borehole logs. Thus, the strength of a reflection from a lithological contact in igneous rock is likely to be related as much to the way the contact was created as to the magnitude of any local change in seismic impedance across it. Although it did not prove possible to map the volcanic stratigraphy of the Ansil mining camp, reflections interpreted to be from the disused, 1300-m-deep mine galleries were recorded. The seismic reflection data also indicate that the tonalitic Flavrian pluton, which underlies the volcanics, is an imbricated, tabular body, crosscut by diorite sills. Seismic reflections in the pluton arise from the sills and, possibly, primary magmatic layering.


Minerals ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (5) ◽  
pp. 263 ◽  
Author(s):  
Suvi Heinonen ◽  
Michal Malinowski ◽  
Felix Hloušek ◽  
Gardar Gislason ◽  
Stefan Buske ◽  
...  

We show that by using an advanced pre-stack depth imaging algorithm it is possible to retrieve meaningful and robust seismic images with sparse shot points, using only 3–4 source points per kilometer along a seismic profile. Our results encourage the use of 2D seismic reflection profiling as a reconnaissance tool for mineral exploration in areas with limited access for active seismic surveys. We used the seismic data acquired within the COGITO-MIN project comprising two approximately 6 km long seismic reflection profiles at the polymetallic Kylylahti massive sulfide mine site in eastern Finland. The 2D seismic data acquisition utilized both Vibroseis and dynamite sources with 20 m spacing and wireless receivers spaced every 10 m. For both source types, the recorded data show clear first breaks over all offsets and reflectors in the raw shot gathers. The Kylylahti area is characterized by folded and faulted, steeply dipping geological contacts and structures. We discuss post-stack and pre-stack data processing and compare time and depth imaging techniques in this geologically complex Precambrian hardrock area. The seismic reflection profiles show prominent reflectors at 4.5–8 km depth utilizing different migration routines. In the shallow subsurface, steep reflectors are imaged, and within and underneath the known Kylylahti ultramafic body reflectivity is prominent but discontinuous.


1984 ◽  
Vol 79 (5) ◽  
pp. 933-946 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bruce E. Nesbitt ◽  
Fred J. Longstaffe ◽  
David R. Shaw ◽  
Karlis Muehlenbachs

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