Jasna Orešković, Aleksej Miloševič, Saša Kolar, S. Šoštarić
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Žune Ba-F epithermal deposit Part 2: Geophysical characterization and exploration perspective
The Žune barite-fluorite ore body in northwestern Bosnia and Herzegovina has been explored in order to determine spatial distribution of the ore body. At the Žune site, barite mineralization occurs in the form of veins and is hosted by dolostone. A geophysical survey was carried out with the aim to detect anomalies associated with the barite-fluorite deposit and to characterize the abandoned old deposit. Therefore, 2D electrical resistivity tomography (ERT) was measured along four profiles. Prior to surface geophysical measurements, detailed geological field mapping of the ore body and host rocks was undertaken. The geometry of the abandoned mining cut with steep walls and complex structural setting with barite that incorporates coarse fragments of host rock and fluorite makes interpretation of the results challenging. The collected geological data were used to calibrate the geophysical models. Forward modelling in addition to inversion of the ERT data helped to reduce the ambiguity of geophysical data interpretation. The results revealed that the barite vein in the area of mining cut is limited to a depth of about 10 m and length is about 40 m. There is no indication for barite mineralization in the area south of the mining cut, while anomalies that may be associated with ore bodies are present in the northern and northeastern part.
期刊介绍:
Geologia Croatica welcomes original scientific papers dealing with diverse aspects of geology and geological engineering, the history of the Earth, and the physical changes that the Earth has undergone or it is undergoing. The Journal covers a wide spectrum of geology disciplines (palaeontology, stratigraphy, mineralogy, sedimentology, petrology, geochemistry, structural geology, karstology, hydrogeology and engineering geology) including pedogenesis, petroleum geology and environmental geology.
Papers especially concerning the Pannonian Basin, Dinarides, the Adriatic/Mediterranean region, as well as notes and reviews interesting to a wider audience (e.g. review papers, book reviews, and notes) are welcome.