Title of article
Discussion of “Geology and diamond distribution of the 140/141 kimberlite, Fort à la Corne, central Saskatchewan, Canada”, by A. Berryman, B.H. Scott-Smith and B.C. Jellicoe (Lithos v. 76, p. 99–114)
Author/Authors
Bruce A. Kjarsgaard ، نويسنده , , Dale A. Leckie، نويسنده , , John-Paul Zonneveld، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages
7
From page
422
To page
428
Abstract
A wide variety of geological data and geological observations by numerous geoscientists do not support a two-stage crater excavation and in-fill model, or a champagne glass-shaped geometry for the 169 or 140/141 kimberlite bodies in the Fort à la Corne kimberlite field, Saskatchewan as described by Berryman, A., Scott Smith, B.H., Jellicoe, B., (2004). Rather, these kimberlite bodies are best described as polygenetic kimberlite tephra cones and tuff rings with associated feeder vents of variable geometry as shown by previous workers for the 169 kimberlite, the 140/141 kimberlite and the Star kimberlite. The domal tephra cone geometry is preserved due to burial by conformable Cretaceous marine mudstones and siltstones and is not an artifact of Quaternary glacial processes.
Keywords
Fort à la Corne , Saskatchewan , Kimberlite , Emplacement model
Journal title
lithos
Serial Year
2007
Journal title
lithos
Record number
1286859
Link To Document