Porphyry copper deposits

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  • Опубликовано: 4 дек 2024

Комментарии • 82

  • @terkelinpurba7579
    @terkelinpurba7579 9 дней назад +2

    Outstanding...need more videp like this ...thanks

  • @farhahkhachaturian2761
    @farhahkhachaturian2761 24 дня назад +2

    Very good. You rise my experience greatly. Thanks

  • @padkirsch
    @padkirsch 7 дней назад +2

    GREAT VIDEO! #subscribed

  • @geologistaman7229
    @geologistaman7229 Год назад +17

    Keep them coming, Taija. I have watched hundreds of geology-related videos, but your style stands out clearly.

  • @AsgharAli-dz4nq
    @AsgharAli-dz4nq Год назад +3

    It's a brilliant video, thanks

  • @muzikhed
    @muzikhed Год назад +6

    I love these educational videos with a scientifc person out in the field showing examples of rock and giving detailed explanation of the geo processes.

  • @timkirkpatrick9155
    @timkirkpatrick9155 11 месяцев назад +3

    Thank you, a great summary over view to refresh my 50yr old geology education.

  • @carlossolana2449
    @carlossolana2449 Год назад +3

    very didactic my teacher couldn't have explained it better

  • @rhysharrop5008
    @rhysharrop5008 4 месяца назад +1

    Fantastic! Really well structured

  • @joaquinsolissilva6206
    @joaquinsolissilva6206 Год назад +2

    Amazing video, definitely sharing it !

  • @umbotube
    @umbotube Год назад +8

    Thank you very much, Taija, for the effort, the clarity, and the overall result. Very well made!

  • @TonkiNZ
    @TonkiNZ 6 месяцев назад +5

    Great video - I worked in Papua New Guinea in 1971 looking for porphyry deposits ... wish I had your video then ! Wandering around in the jungle not quiet sure what I was lookng for !

  • @baTonkaTruck
    @baTonkaTruck 9 месяцев назад +2

    This is so well produced, explained, and filmed, absolutely top-tier educational material. I really appreciate how you showed close-up examples of the rocks, not just chemistry or blurry photos. It's linking together the theory/science with looking at real, actual rocks, that's what's lacking in a lot of online geology content, and you do this very well.

  • @johnortega8495
    @johnortega8495 Год назад

    Great video ❤ and style.

  • @Grumpyoldman037
    @Grumpyoldman037 Год назад +5

    Very interesting! It gives me a much clearer view of the natural processes involved.

  • @jfvanschalkwyk
    @jfvanschalkwyk Год назад +1

    Great video .. I am working on porphyry copper systems and enjoy the simple way in which this presentation is done...!

  • @НикитаШалюто
    @НикитаШалюто 11 месяцев назад +1

    Your videos on types of deposits are really useful for young specialists in the exploration area. Thank you for providing these. It would be perfect if you could share some articles or other scientific sources.

  • @khalidmohamed6888
    @khalidmohamed6888 Год назад +2

    Much appreciated Taija... Lovely to see you again teaching...
    Well made 👍🏼

  • @DavidRoberts01341
    @DavidRoberts01341 Год назад +3

    Thank you for this video. I live and work in the area and have been looking for an easy to understand explanation of Glasdir and its copper deposit for years. If you go up the hill from the Glasdir mill ruins, you can find the huge canyon of the mine itself and look down into it. It's quite a contrast to the narrower veins of the gold and other metal mines, in the area.

  • @MostafaMohamed-gc7qq
    @MostafaMohamed-gc7qq 9 месяцев назад +1

    Thanks Taija very much for your effort and impressive work. Love it

  • @davidl.howser9707
    @davidl.howser9707 11 месяцев назад

    Such clarity found in these explanations when attempting to locate a copper deposit. Most impressive. I learned so much. Thank you for the gift. Thank you. : )

  • @waltertodd4479
    @waltertodd4479 11 месяцев назад

    Best video on porphyry copper deposits!

  • @martinovando
    @martinovando 10 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you very much for your presentation and your knowledge!! and greetings from Chile!!

  • @dannedifyoudo
    @dannedifyoudo 4 месяца назад

    Wow amazing video. Gonna watch all of yours now.

  • @knottynuffakers7529
    @knottynuffakers7529 11 месяцев назад

    I also ride along in those videos. For you to climb and risk injury, to bring me right into your world of Geology. A wonderful job. Looking forward for more.

  • @jacksprat9972
    @jacksprat9972 11 месяцев назад +1

    Thanks for making this video. Your did an A+ job. This was really a very effective virtual field trip and it was good to see the alteration zone mineral assemblages first hand.

  • @octavioclarin4935
    @octavioclarin4935 Год назад

    This is great!

  • @paulkurilecz4209
    @paulkurilecz4209 4 месяца назад

    An excellent presentation of the process for how these deposits form. I was able to fully understand and appreciate this geological process. Up until now, I did not understand why certain mineral deposits form in certain locales and what the process is for their deposition. It makes the source, trapping and accumulation of petroleum deposits seem to be much simpler, though related.

  • @choppering
    @choppering 8 месяцев назад +1

    Yo’re doing Very Good videos in a easy way to understand. Thanks

  • @basil6276
    @basil6276 3 дня назад

    Love your style of teaching ❤

  • @dominicestebanrice7460
    @dominicestebanrice7460 11 месяцев назад

    Fascinating. Thank you!

  • @hashemameli3666
    @hashemameli3666 Год назад +1

    Hello Professor, I really enjoyed your scientific and eloquent words, as few people pay attention to the alterations and the geographical and geological condition of the mines. I praise you.

  • @shahsauood4052
    @shahsauood4052 10 месяцев назад +1

    Mam i am really thankful to you, i was wondering a lecture about porphyry deposits but i did not find before this lecture really help me about porphyry deposits thank very much

  • @blackdiamondsailor
    @blackdiamondsailor Год назад

    Excellent video, thank you!

  • @Miningpastpresentfuture
    @Miningpastpresentfuture 11 месяцев назад +1

    Great explanation I am going to share this with some past coworkers. I was happy to hear you say that small mining can help supply more copper for the future. Unfortunately the mining industry has forgotten about small mines and governmental permitting has made it very difficult to get enough financing in advance to get all of the engineering studies and environmental surveys to get permits.

  • @JosephBolding-gs1tn
    @JosephBolding-gs1tn 6 месяцев назад

    Love it

  • @muhabduh8464
    @muhabduh8464 10 месяцев назад

    Thank you very much for the video🙏, now I'm working as a young Geologist & still learning about the PCD especially in Tombulilato District(Cabang Kiri, Sungai Mak & Kayubulan) Indonesia.

  • @Fusako8
    @Fusako8 Год назад +1

    Looking forward to your next copper video!

  • @fazlerehman8891
    @fazlerehman8891 8 месяцев назад

    you have delivered lecture very simple method and easy understand that you can explain ❤❤❤❤

  • @jackprier7727
    @jackprier7727 Год назад

    Thank you for very clearly explaining clearly the big picture, many things I had wondered about--

  • @wolkenbummler
    @wolkenbummler Год назад +1

    Taija, I really like your videos, partly because I am living on the slope of a porphyr hill and because my familly was involved (some generations ago) in small scale manganese and copper mining.
    Thank you very much for the clear explanations.

    • @ourmetallicearth
      @ourmetallicearth  Год назад

      Thank you, very glad you enjoy them! There are a lot of small historic mines pretty much everywhere, it's always interesting to find out about local industrial history.

  • @geologylifeandhealingbyseb2937

    boVery nice presentation and very important information about PCD, Thank you for your video and please continue doing, Yes, yes!!, ye!!!

  • @AndreasMitchell
    @AndreasMitchell Год назад +3

    Hey, this is good informative content. Good personable presentation style. Sound recording could be clearer. I will happily watch more such content.

    • @ourmetallicearth
      @ourmetallicearth  Год назад

      Thanks for the feedback! I will watch out for the audio quality for my next videos, I guess some devices won't play back as clearly as others.

  • @juanvasquez9561
    @juanvasquez9561 6 месяцев назад

    Thank you so much for this gift!..I live in arizona and all the geology is almost the same but hotter!🤠🤘🌵

  • @nicevideomancanada
    @nicevideomancanada 8 месяцев назад +1

    Wow, another great video. How do you do it ;-)

  • @fiegenfiegen
    @fiegenfiegen Год назад +1

    Awfully intresting! Clearly the minerals present today show what happened in the past. Thank you!

  • @michaelkaiser4674
    @michaelkaiser4674 Год назад

    5X5 Datil NM USA rock on Taija

  • @RustyAtwood-s1p
    @RustyAtwood-s1p 3 дня назад

    Thanks for the info in this video.
    Owner of Alaska Rare Earth LLC

  • @desert-walker
    @desert-walker Год назад +1

    Interesting I live in Tucson Arizona. I have copper everywhere I go lol everywhere I hike I see nothing but copper and copper mines everywhere.😊

  • @Zackzickel
    @Zackzickel 5 месяцев назад

    How old are the rocks around the Welsh mine you are showing? When did the alteration happen?

  • @markharder3676
    @markharder3676 11 месяцев назад

    Thank you, Taija. I've heard of Cu porphyry deposits, but never seen one in the flesh. Is the proposed Pebble Mine (copper, gold) a porphyry deposit?

  • @doctorj6626
    @doctorj6626 8 месяцев назад

    What caused the grey coloration of the rock at 21:33? If its rich in sulfides why is it not oxidizing to shades of brown, yellow etc?

    • @ourmetallicearth
      @ourmetallicearth  8 месяцев назад +1

      Parts of the outcrop are a fairly fresh surface, as this is a road cutting. So it hasn't been exposed to the elements for that long so the more massive sulphides haven't rusted yet

    • @doctorj6626
      @doctorj6626 8 месяцев назад

      Thank you@@ourmetallicearth

  • @jamesraymond1158
    @jamesraymond1158 Год назад

    Interesting video but I had much trouble understanding it, mainly because porphyry is not defined and there is no mention of common copper minerals like malachite or azurite at the beginning of the video. The word is confusing because it is similar to porphyrins, which are complex organic compounds., which made me think it contains porphyrins. It would have helped to start with the definition: Porphyry is unrelated to porphyrin. It is any of various granites or igneous rocks with coarse-grained crystals such as feldspar or quartz . It comes from the Greek porphura meaning purple, because these rocks often have a purple color.

  • @hashemameli3666
    @hashemameli3666 Год назад

    Professor, the question I had is about the carbonate and silica veins, do they contain precious metals, usually these types of veins that I encounter in my mine are full of gold.

    • @ourmetallicearth
      @ourmetallicearth  Год назад

      These ones don't contain much precious metals, neither did the original breccia pipes, a little bit of gold and silver but not much. So in this case the source contained pretty much only base metals. There are some gold rich veins nearby though that have been long considered to be orogenic, but we at Leeds think they might in fact be related to the porphyry system.

  • @factchecker9358
    @factchecker9358 11 месяцев назад +1

    Copper use in EVs will fall as 48v architecture expands to more models after the engineering testbed of the cybertruck. Other OEMs will follow or fail from uncompetitive costs going forward over the next six years. That time span is much less than the planning horizon for major copper mine projects. Overbuilding in the Chinese housing market is another overhang with less transparent data. Copper inventories in China are also an unknown along with the state secrets of their strategic oil reserve.

  • @bulwynkl
    @bulwynkl Год назад

    I have a question - How big are these deposits? 10'ss of m wide? km wide?

    • @ourmetallicearth
      @ourmetallicearth  Год назад

      They can get really big. The stockwork mineralisation can be at a km-scale across for big porphyry systems, that's why they can be economic even at fairly low metal grades. The breccia pipes are smaller but richer, typically some 10s of metres across. The North Wales porhyry intrusion complex is in the order of 10 km long and a few km wide, it doesn't really have a well developed stockwork but there are several breccia pipes in the order of some 10s of m across that were historically mined, Glasdir being one of them.

  • @cma4023
    @cma4023 11 месяцев назад

    The rock looks a heck of a lot like giant petrified wood grain, oozing ancient sap now mineralized.

  • @SteveTheFazeman
    @SteveTheFazeman 11 месяцев назад

    I was hoping that the origin and subsequent use of the term porphyry was defined in this video. But that's alright. As my oldest brother used to say, "Look it up yourself!"🤓

  • @Cynthia-rt2mz
    @Cynthia-rt2mz 11 месяцев назад

    Contrary to popular banking belief:
    Earth IS the formula of EVERLASTING LIFE in material form!
    WOW: YA MEAN gold copper and other conductive material lays strategically along it's paths of LIFE'S VEINS.
    Who could have ever imagined?

  • @SenorTucano
    @SenorTucano 10 месяцев назад

    The wheels are already falling off the EV bus. And the bus is also on fire 🔥

  • @christiansmith-of7dt
    @christiansmith-of7dt 10 месяцев назад

    Sometimes you just got to let people know whats going on

  • @eslamtarek2620
    @eslamtarek2620 11 месяцев назад

    I am fresh geologist and i am seeking for any opportunity if you have one please share with me