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Brazilian Journal of Geology, Volume: 53, Número: 3, Publicado: 2023
  • Motion maps derived from optical satellite images: the case study of the East Anatolian Fault (Türkiye) Rapid Communications

    Hartwig, Marcos Eduardo; Bottacin, Cícero Dias; Grohmann, Carlos Henrique

    Resumo em Inglês:

    Abstract On February 6, 2023, two earthquakes shook the southern and central Türkiye causing significant loss of human life and devastating many cities. These are related to the active East Anatolian Fault (EAF). In this study, the digital image correlation (DIC) technique is applied to map the coseismic displacements. For that, a pair of scenes from the Sentinel-2 satellite acquired before and after the seismic events was used. The results showed that the methodological approach can be effectively used to map and monitor large-scale geological phenomena and can assist in seismic risk assessment.
  • Artisanal and small-scale gold mining in the Southern Espinhaço Range, Brazil, using time-domain electromagnetic induction: prospecting, efficiency, and environmental aspects Article

    Borgatti, Henrique; Melo, Aline Tavares; Knauer, Luiz Guilherme

    Resumo em Inglês:

    Abstract Gold mining has profound ties to the history of Brazilian colonization and still takes place with many communities involved in artisanal and small-scale gold mining. The most relevant gold deposits in the Southern Espinhaço Range are related to the occurrence of shear zones in the region between the cities of Diamantina and Gouveia, Minas Gerais, Brazil. Former colonial-dated gold mines were depleted; however, the use of newer prospecting practices has brought new interest in these areas. In this context, this study assesses the efficiency, environmental impacts, and economic viability of time-domain electromagnetic induction as a gold exploration method for small-scale prospecting in Gouveia county. Additionally, this study provides a characterization of the local gold mineralization and brings awareness to the prospecting community regarding environmental and legal aspects of gold mining. This article presents the results of a field campaign of prospecting efforts in which 114 metallic targets were located, 35 of which were identified as native gold. The gold samples have specific morphology, depth, and weight that suggest a hypogenic origin with a low degree of transport at eluvial levels. From an environmental perspective, the time-domain electromagnetic induction method has presented fewer impacts, related mostly to site-specific remobilization of the soil.
  • Sodic alkaline magmatism in Eastern Paraguay revisited: geochemical and petrological implications Article

    Gomes, Celso de Barros; Comin-Chiaramonti, Piero; Velázquez, Victor Fernandez

    Resumo em Inglês:

    Abstract Associated with subordinate potassic rocks, Mesozoic to Cenozoic sodic alkaline rocks are represented by four distinct provinces in Eastern Paraguay: Alto Paraguay, Central, Misiones, and Asunción; additional Rio Apa and Amambay provinces are exclusively of potassic affinity. Alkaline magmatism is clearly controlled by a tectonic extensional regime that generated NW-SE-trending faults and grabens. It varies in composition, with the intrusive sodic rocks mainly composed of foid syenites and quartz-bearing syenites and the potassic ones of syenites, syenogabbros, and gabbros, all of which are accompanied by fine-grained hypoabissal and volcanic counterparts. In the Central Province, potassic and sodic rocks occur together and are represented by two distinct magmatic series: basanites-phonolites and alkali basalts-trachytes/trachyphonolites. Ultramafic sodic rocks (ankaratrites and nephelinites) are uniquely found in the Misiones and Asunción provinces. In general, the sodic rocks exhibit LILE enrichment, high field strength elements depletion, and Nb-Ta positive anomalies in the mantle's normalized incompatible elements (IE) distribution. Chondrite-normalized rare earth element (REE) diagrams point to strong REE enrichment and high light/heavy rare earth element fractionation in different subparallel patterns. Conversely, the potassic rocks display negative anomalies of Nb-Ta and are fractionated in REE. In the initial Sri versus Ndi diagram, the sodic rocks approach to bulk earth, whereas the potassic ones plot into the Sr-enriched quadrant. Sr-Nd-Pb isotope data suggest that a high U/Pb mantle component played an important role in the genesis of the Late Early Cretaceous and Tertiary sodic magmas, while an enriched mantle component dominated the Early Cretaceous potassic magmas. The close association of potassic and sodic rocks implies that their parental magmas derived from a subcontinental mantle variable in composition enriched in IE.
  • The provenance of terrigenous mud on reefs in Royal Charlotte Bank, Bahia, Brazil Article

    Turbay, Caio Vinícius Gabrig; Orlando, Marcos Tadeu D’Azeredo; Lacerda, Carlos Henrique Figueiredo; Duarte, Eduardo Baudson

    Resumo em Inglês:

    Abstract The East Brazilian continental margin contains a large shelf sector called the Royal Charlotte Bank. It has terrigenous and carbonate sedimentation associated with coastal reefs. Studies using X-ray diffractometry (XRD) and the geochemistry of immobile elements were done in samples of these reefs to figure out the provenance of the mud that arrives there. In order to do this, samples of riverine sediment from the Jequitinhonha, Santo Antônio, João de Tiba, and Buranhém rivers as well as from the Barreiras Group’s sedimentary cliffs were taken. The Jequitinhonha River was found to be the most significant mud source. This was supported by the mineral fingerprints of smectite and biotite, the concentrations of immobile trace elements such as Zr, Hf, Nb, Ta, and Th, and the distribution and ratio of rare-earth elements. These findings are supported by the prevailing north-to-south drift that occurs in the region due to the northeasterly trade winds and waves that blow throughout the region for the vast majority of the year. The findings have significant implications for hydrographic basin management and the protection of reef benthic populations.
  • Mineral chemistry from the Alfeu-I lamproite (Southern Brazil) and its contribution to understand the mantle heterogeneity under South American Plate during the Gondwana breakup Article

    Carniel, Larissa Colombo; Conceição, Rommulo Vieira; Provenzano, Carlos Augusto S.; Sander, Andrea; Leitzke, Felipe Padilha; Silva, Andrea Brum da; Berndt, Jasper; Klemme, Stephan

    Resumo em Inglês:

    Abstract The Alfeu-I lamproite is one of the few alkaline rock occurrences in the South of Brazil that represents the alkaline event related to the South Atlantic opening and the enormous magmatic activity that formed the Paraná basalts. Alfeu-I lamproite is a diatreme facies and exhibits an inequigranular texture with macrocrysts of mica, spinel, garnet, and ilmenite and microcrysts of mica, pyroxene, and rare olivine, all immersed in a groundmass of pyroxene, spinel, perovskite, rutile, ilmenite, and, more rarely, olivine. Major element compositions of Alfeu-I pyroxene, garnet, ilmenite, mica, and olivine were determined by electron microprobe analyses, and trace element concentrations of clinopyroxene, garnet, ilmenite, and mica were measured using laser-ablation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry techniques. Temperature, pressure, and oxygen fugacity (fO2) conditions during the crystallization of Alfeu-I lamproite were calculated with the geothermobarometers and olivine, spinel, garnet, and orthopyroxene. The resulting mean equilibrium temperature ranges from 1375°C at 4 GPa to 1395°C at 5 GPa, whereas the fO2 points to ΔFMQ = +2.4 (at 4 GPa) and ΔFMQ = +2.2 (at 5 GPa). Rb-Sr and Sm-Nd isotopic data together with the trace element concentrations of minerals suggest that melting of a mantle source enriched in incompatible elements and volatiles due to previous subduction events occurred during the Gondwana breakup around 125 Ma ago. Fluids that may have originated from subducting slabs in the old subduction zone are probably the cause of the high fO2 conditions in Alfeu-I lamproite.
  • Structural controls on the Bonsucesso Zinc-Lead Deposit, Vazante Group, Brazil Article

    Ferraz, Edson Ricardo Maia; Luvizotto, George Luiz; Okubo, Juliana; Batiston, Denis Antonio

    Resumo em Inglês:

    Abstract The Bonsucesso zinc-lead (Zn-Pb) sulfide deposit is hosted in carbonate rocks from the Vazante Group (transition of the Mesoproterozoic to the Neoproterozoic time), northwest of Minas Gerais State, Brazil. Regional deformation is associated with the thin-skinned tectonics that led to the formation of the foreland zone of the Brasília Orogen during the Neoproterozoic. These orogenic processes are the trigger of Zn-Pb mineralization in many base-metal deposits in the Vazante Group. Here, we describe the ore textures and the structures of the deposit to define its structural controls in deposit scale and formulate hypotheses about its forming process in the context of other Vazante Zn-Pb deposits. Mineralization distribution is controlled by a high-angle fault zone striking NNW and dipping 60° to WSW. Fault-related fractures functioned as pathways for Zn-Pb-rich fluids to be redistributed and crystallize where chemical conditions were adequate. Mineralization was likely formed in an extensional setting in breccia zones controlled by flexurally induced normal faults related to development of the foreland basin of Brasília Orogen. Later, the entire Vazante sequence underwent an inversion process and extensional structures were reactivated or obliterated. Finally, an understanding of local controls may be of good use to target exploration for new orebodies in the district scale.
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