"There's one characteristic that is common to all of these big gold and copper deposits anywhere in the world," says Professor James Mungall of the Department of Geology. The ocean's crust that is pushed down under a volcano starts to melt, which it doesn't normally do. His study, which appears in the October issue of Geology, examines the "Rim of Fire" volcanoes that surround the Pacific Ocean.
Mungall suggests that rich mineral deposits occur only when a slab of ocean floor slides underneath a continent or another part of the ocean floor and melts from the heat of the earth's interior. The slab may get stuck long enough to melt or it may scrape along almost horizontally under the volcano, melting and causing the release of the metals to produce gold or copper deposits that are close enough to the surface for mining.
"These findings could help to identify regions where these rich deposits are most likely to be present," says Mungall. The research was funded by the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada.
ADDITIONAL CONTACT INFORMATION: Professor James Mungall, Department of Geology, 416-978-2975, mungall@geology.utoronto.ca
Journal
Geology