• Title/Summary/Keyword: NMC Moland mine

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Gravity Exploration Inferring the Source Granite of the NMC Moland Mine, Jecheon, Chungbuk (충북 제천 NMC 몰랜드 광산의 관계 화성암에 대한 중력탐사)

  • Shin, Young Hong;Yoo, Bong Chul;Lim, Mutaek;Park, Yeong-Sue;Ko, In Se
    • Economic and Environmental Geology
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    • v.47 no.2
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    • pp.107-119
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    • 2014
  • NMC Moland mine, which is classified as a contact replacement or skarn deposit, has been interpreted to have been formed by Daebo igneous activity which intruded into the Joseon Supergroup, because it is quite closely located to Jecheon granite. However, an alternative interpretation was recently suggested that the mine could be related with the hydrothermal fluid originated from Cretaceous granitic rocks, bringing about skarnization and Mo mineralization. Here we present an interpretation on the source granite of the mine based on the gravity exploration: the gravity anomaly, unlike the surface geology, shows that the Muamsa granite could be the related granite of the mine, because its hidden subsurface structure is expected to be more widely extended to surrounding area of the mine and deeper than the Jecheon granite.

Digital Gravity Anomaly Map of KIGAM (한국지질자원연구원 디지털 중력 이상도)

  • Lim, Mutaek;Shin, Younghong;Park, Yeong-Sue;Rim, Hyoungrea;Ko, In Se;Park, Changseok
    • Geophysics and Geophysical Exploration
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    • v.22 no.1
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    • pp.37-43
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    • 2019
  • We present gravity anomaly maps based on KIGAM's gravity data measured from 2000 to 2018. Until 2016, we acquired gravity data on about 6,400 points for the purpose of regional mapping covering the whole country with data density of at least one point per $4km{\times}4km$ for reducing the time of the data acquisition. In addition, we have performed local gravity surveys for the purpose of mining development in and around the NMC Moland Mine at Jecheon in 2013 and in the Taebaeksan mineralized zone from 2015 to 2018 with data interval of several hundred meters to 2 km. Meanwhile, we carried out precise gravity explorations with data interval of about 250 m on and around epicenter areas of Gyeongju and Pohang earthquakes of relatively large magnitude which occurred in 2016 and in 2017, respectively. Thus we acquired in total about 9,600 points data as the result. We also used additional data acquired by Pusan National University for some local areas. Finally, gravity data more than 16,000 points except for the repetition and temporal control points were available to calculate free-air, Bouguer, and isostatic gravity anomalies. Therefore, the presented anomaly maps are most advanced in spatial distribution and the number of used data so far in Korea.