This report contains a revised descriptive model of porphyry copper deposits (PCDs), the world’s largest source (about 60 percent) and resource (about 65 percent) of copper and a major source of molybdenum, gold and silver. Despite relatively low grades (average 0.44 percent copper in 2008), PCDs have significant economic and societal impacts due to their large size (commonly hundreds of millions to billions of metric tons), long mine lives (decades), and high produc- tion rates (billions of kilograms of copper per year). The revised model describes the geotectonic setting of PCDs, and provides extensive regional- to deposit-scale descriptions and illustrations of geological, geochemical, geophysical, and geoenvironmental characteristics. Current genetic theories are reviewed and evaluated, knowledge gaps are identified, and a variety of exploration and assessment guides are presented. A summary is included for users seeking overviews of specific topics. Summary
CITATION STYLE
John, D. A., Ayuso, R. A., Barton, M. D., Bodnar, R. J., Dilles, J. H., Gray, F., … Vikre, P. G. (2010). Porphyry Copper Deposit Model, Chap. B of Mineral Deposit Models for Resource Assessment. U.S. Geological Survey Scientific Investigations report 2010-5070-B (p. 169). Retrieved from https://pubs.usgs.gov/sir/2010/5070/b
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