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Featured researches published by Eric Seedorff.


Geosphere | 2016

Structural reconstruction and age of an extensionally faulted porphyry molybdenum system at Spruce Mountain, Elko County, Nevada

James R. Pape; Eric Seedorff; Tyler C. Baril; Tommy B. Thompson

This study integrates a cross-sectional restoration of normal faults and porphyry-related hydrothermal alteration zones with six new U-Pb zircon dates to constrain the ages of mineralization and large-magnitude Cenozoic extension at Spruce Mountain, northeastern Nevada (USA). Paleozoic sedimentary rocks and sparse rhyolitic intrusive rocks host a porphyry molybdenum deposit dated as ca. 38 Ma that contains associated skarn, carbonate replacements, fissure veins, and jasperoid. At least six crosscutting sets of normal faults with variable dip directions (east, west, and north) and angles ( 60°) are identified at Spruce Mountain, reflecting overprinting phases of extension. Based on the restored cross section, normal faulting at Spruce Mountain resulted in ∼6.9 km (120%) of total extension and ∼35° of net eastward tilting. The first four fault sets, late Eocene (ca. 38 Ma) or older, collectively accommodate most of the total extension (∼5.4 km). Later faults probably were active in the Miocene and Quaternary. All restored faults had initial dips of 45° or greater, and the restored preextensional structure of Spruce Mountain consists of west-vergent folds and gentle westward dips of Paleozoic rocks. Spruce Mountain is classified as a rhyolitic porphyry Mo or Climax-type deposit, with extensive skarn. Eocene rhyolite porphyry dikes associated with porphyry Mo mineralization locally intrude the early generations of normal faults at Spruce Mountain. However, many normal faults also postdate molybdenum mineralization and have partially dismembered the system. Cross-sectional restoration of the postmineralization faulting suggests that the original deposit had an ∼6 km long by ∼3 km deep elliptical pattern with carbonate replacement deposits surrounding skarn.


Archive | 2005

Porphyry deposits; characteristics and origin of hypogene features

Eric Seedorff; John H. Dilles; John M. Proffett; Marco T. Einaudi; Lukas Zurcher; William J. A. Stavast; David A. Johnson; Mark D. Barton; Jeffrey W. Hedenquist; John F. Thompson; Richard J. Goldfarb; Jeremy P. Richards


Economic Geology | 2004

Henderson Porphyry Molybdenum System, Colorado: II. Decoupling of Introduction and Deposition of Metals during Geochemical Evolution of Hydrothermal Fluids

Eric Seedorff; Marco T. Einaudi


Economic Geology | 2004

Henderson Porphyry Molybdenum System, Colorado: I. Sequence and Abundance of Hydrothermal Mineral Assemblages, Flow Paths of Evolving Fluids, and Evolutionary Style

Eric Seedorff; Marco T. Einaudi


Economic Geology | 2008

Root Zones of Porphyry Systems: Extending the Porphyry Model to Depth

Eric Seedorff; Mark D. Barton; William J. A. Stavast; David J. Maher


Economic Geology | 2008

TERTIARY TILTING AND DISMEMBERMENT OF THE LARAMIDE ARC AND RELATED HYDROTHERMAL SYSTEMS, SIERRITA MOUNTAINS, ARIZONA

William J. A. Stavast; Robert F. Butler; Eric Seedorff; Mark D. Barton; Charles A. Ferguson


Economic Geology | 2014

Succession of Laramide Magmatic and Magmatic-Hydrothermal Events in the Patagonia Mountains, Santa Cruz County, Arizona

Peter G. Vikre; Frederick T. Graybeal; Robert J. Fleck; Mark D. Barton; Eric Seedorff


Mineralium Deposita | 2017

Coarse muscovite veins and alteration deep in the Yerington batholith, Nevada: insights into fluid exsolution in the roots of porphyry copper systems

Matthew Steele-MacInnis; Eric Seedorff; Pilar Lecumberri-Sanchez; Frank K. Mazdab


Geosphere | 2017

Characterization and reconstruction of Laramide shortening and superimposed Cenozoic extension, Romero Wash–Tecolote Ranch area, southeastern Arizona

Daniel A. Favorito; Eric Seedorff


Economic Geology | 2016

Dismembered Porphyry Systems near Wickenburg, Arizona: District-Scale Reconstruction with an Arc-Scale Context

Phillip A. Nickerson; Eric Seedorff

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Richard J. Goldfarb

United States Geological Survey

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