Abstract

The mineral field structure of a complex placer is a set of features reflecting the distribution and correlation of useful and accompanying placer-forming minerals, their variation trends, the ordering degree of mineral assemblages, inhomogeneity levels, etc. The mineral field structure is one of the most important characteristics of polymineral placers. Along with other properties, it allows one to judge the regional and local formation condition of a placer and to assign it to a certain dynamic class. The informativeness of this parameter increases if the mineral field inhomogeneity of complex placers is estimated using various statistical models, in particular, the method of major components, which is one of the modifications of the factor analysis. This method allows one to restore the structure of such a multifactor system as mineral assemblages of complex heavy-mineral placers. This analysis yields particularly interesting results in the reconstruction of formation environments of fossil placers that have lost connection with the recent topography (Devonian gold-diamond-rare metal placers in the middle Timan region and Mesozoic-Cenozoic titanium-zirconium placers in northern Kazakhstan). It is demonstrated that the mineral field of a proximal polymineral placer is extremely disordered; its mineral assemblages primarily reflect the provenance rock composition and only insignificantly the formation environment of the placer itself. The mineral field of a complex coastal-marine placer of heavy minerals (CMP), in contrast, reflects practically exclusively the lithodynamic situation within the shoreline zone, including an influence of local factors. Only in exceptional cases, the inhomogeneity of the mineral field of a certain CMP reflects an additional influence of rocks of the source area.

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