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Featured researches published by Alireza Karimzadeh Somarin.


Archive | 2011

Petrography, Geochemistry and Petrogenesis of Late-Stage Granites: An Example from the Glen Eden Area, New South Wales, Australia

Alireza Karimzadeh Somarin

The Glen Eden area is located within the New England Orogen (also known as New England Fold Belt). This orogen is one of the major structural elements within the extensive Tasman Orogenic Province which comprises the eastern part of the Australian continent (Hensel, 1982). The present length of this orogen is about 1500 km from Townsville to Newcastle. It is separated from the Thomson and Lachlan fold belts to the west by the Permian and Triassic strata of the Bowen-Gunnedah-Sydney Basin. The Mesozoic ClarenceMoreton and Great Artesian basins separate the northern and southern parts of this orogen. The New England Orogen was the site of the extensive episodic calc-alkaline magmatism related to west-dipping subduction from middle Paleozoic to Early Cretaceous time. The oldest rocks might have formed at least partly in a volcanic island arc, but from the Late Devonian, the orogen developed as a convergent Pacific-type continental margin. During Late Devonian-Carboniferous time, parallel belts representing continental margin, volcanic arc, forearc basin and subduction complex assemblages can be recognized (Murray, 1988). More than one hundred plutons were emplaced from the Late Carboniferous to the Triassic in the southern NEO. These intrusions have been attributed to two major periods of plutonism, the first during Late Carboniferous time and the second during the Late Permian and Triassic. The resulting plutons comprise the New England Batholith. Although volcanogenic massive sulfides and volcanic-hosted epithermal gold-silver ore deposits occur in older rock sequences (Murray, 1988), almost all of the other ore deposits of this region, including the Glen Eden Mo-W-Sn deposit, have a genetic or paragenetic relationship with plutons of the New England Batholith which is one of the largest Paleozoic-Mesozoic batholiths in eastern Australia. It underlies an area of almost 20000 km2 and is composed of more than one hundred N-S-trending plutons which include all of the granitoids in the southern part of the NEO. These granitoids intruded into the tectono-stratigraphic terranes (Flood and Aitchison, 1993a, b) and deformed trench-complex metasedimentary rocks (Shaw and Flood, 1981). The composition of this batholith is 80% monzogranite, 18% granodiorite, 1% diorite and tonalite, 1% quartz-bearing monzonite and <0.2% gabbro (see Shaw and Flood, 1981). On the basis of petrography, geochemistry and isotopic characteristics, Shaw and Flood (1981) subdivided the granitoids of the New England Batholith into five intrusive suites and


Exploration and Mining Geology | 2007

Iron Oxide Copper-Gold-type Polymetallic Mineralization in the Contact Lake Belt, Great Bear Magmatic Zone, Northwest Territories, Canada

A.H. Mumin; L. Corriveau; Alireza Karimzadeh Somarin; L. Ootes


Applied Clay Science | 2015

Potentiality of clay raw materials from Gram area (Northern Tunisia) in the ceramic industry

Faten Hammami-Ben Zaied; Riadh Abidi; Najet Slim-Shimi; Alireza Karimzadeh Somarin


Journal of African Earth Sciences | 2010

Mineralogy and fluid inclusions study of carbonate-hosted Mississippi valley-type Ain Allega Pb–Zn–Sr–Ba ore deposit, Northern Tunisia

Riadh Abidi; Najet Slim-Shimi; Alireza Karimzadeh Somarin; M. Henchiri


International Journal of Earth Sciences | 2010

Garnetization as a ground preparation process for copper mineralization: evidence from the Mazraeh skarn deposit, Iran

Alireza Karimzadeh Somarin


Resource Geology | 2012

The Paleo-Proterozoic High Heat Production Richardson Granite, Great Bear Magmatic Zone, Northwest Territories, Canada : Source of U for Port Radium?

Alireza Karimzadeh Somarin; A. Hamid Mumin


Minerals | 2016

Mineralogy, Geochemistry and Stable Isotope Studies of the Dopolan Bauxite Deposit, Zagros Mountain, Iran

Somayeh Salamab Ellahi; Batoul Taghipour; Alireza Zarasvandi; Michael I. Bird; Alireza Karimzadeh Somarin


Bulletin De La Societe Geologique De France | 2011

Genesis of celestite - bearing cap rock formation from the Ain Allega ore deposit (northern Tunisia): contributions from microthermometric studies

Riadh Abidi; Najet Slim-Shimi; Dominique Gasquet; Nouri Hatira; Alireza Karimzadeh Somarin


Turkish Journal of Earth Sciences | 2016

Geological, geochemical, and fluid inclusion evidences for the origin of the Ravanj Pb?Ba?Ag deposit, north of Delijan city, Markazi Province, Iran

Mostafa Nejadhadad; Batoul Taghipour; Alireza Zarasvandi; Alireza Karimzadeh Somarin


Arabian Journal of Geosciences | 2015

Skarn mineral assemblages in the Esfordi iron oxide–apatite deposit, Bafq district, Central Iran

Sedigheh Taghipour; Ali Kananian; Mohammad Ali Mackizadeh; Alireza Karimzadeh Somarin

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L. Corriveau

Geological Survey of Canada

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