Use of tourmaline in stream sediments to detect submarine exhalative sulfide deposits: example from central Virginia, U.S.A.

1988 
Abstract The detection of several unmined submarine exhalative sulfide deposits, most of which are concealed with no surface expression, was investigated using the distribution grain counts of tourmaline in stream sediment concentrates. The number of sulfide zones located using this method is comparable to that achieved using trace metal nalyses of fine-grained stream sediment andMnz.sbnd;Fe oxide coatings on stream pebbles. Because both dravite, associated with a sulfide zone, and schorl, from a pegmatite, are known to occur in the field area, it is likely that both will occur in stream sediment and will be included in tourmaline-grain-counts of sediment concentrates. Attempts to differentiate dravite and schorl in the sediment concentrates, based on microscopically observable physical properties, were unsuccessful, but semi-quantitative chemical analyses should readily accomplish this because of large differences in Mg and Fe concentrations.
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