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Image of Subsurface geometry of the Revell Batholith by constrained geophysical modelling, NW Ontario, Canada

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Subsurface geometry of the Revell Batholith by constrained geophysical modelling, NW Ontario, Canada

Martin Mushayandebvu - Personal Name; Aaron DesRoches - Personal Name; Martin Bates - Personal Name; Andy Parmenter - Personal Name; Derek Kouhi - Personal Name;

The Revell batholith is located within the Western Wabigoon terrane of the Superior Province, Northwestern Ontario, Canada, and is a potential site for a deep geological repository (DGR). This batholith is considered to have favourable geoscientific characteristics for hosting a DGR, including a sufficient volume of relatively homogenous rock. The subsurface geometry of the batholith plays an important role in determining its volume, as well as assessing regional-scale hydraulics, rock mechanics, and glacial stress disturbances on the bedrock, which are other important features and processes that can impact the batholith over the timeframes of concern for long-term storage of used nuclear fuel. Subsurface geometry is complicated to unravel, and surface mapping alone is inadequate to obtain the information at depth. However, gravity, magnetic, or seismic data can be used to enhance understanding by approximating the geometry.
This study aims to refine the subsurface geometry and distribution of the Revell batholith from a constrained forward and inverse geophysical model, incorporating high-resolution geophysical data together with a compilation of historic and recent geological field data. The Revell batholith was previously cited as a flat-based pluton with a depth of 1.6 km, where our findings suggest the batholith is deeper than previously thought, with an uneven contact geometry at its base that extends slightly deeper than 3.5 km. Model uncertainties were assessed by varying probabilistic constraints on volume overlap/commonality and shape within GeoModellerâ„¢. Results indicate that overall batholith-greenstone contact is generally unchanged when the geological constraints are varied, providing a high degree of confidence that the Revell batholith has a sufficient volume of relatively homogeneous bedrock.


Availability
159551.136Perpustakaan BIG (Eksternal Harddisk)Available
Detail Information
Series Title
Applied Computing and Geoscience - Open Access
Call Number
551.136
Publisher
Amsterdam : Elsevier., 2023
Collation
14 hlm PDF, 13.525 KB
Language
Inggris
ISBN/ISSN
2590-1974
Classification
551.136
Content Type
text
Media Type
-
Carrier Type
-
Edition
Vol.19, September 2023
Subject(s)
Inversion model
Uncertainty
Batholith
Deep geological repository
Precambrian
Specific Detail Info
-
Statement of Responsibility
-
Other version/related

No other version available

File Attachment
  • Subsurface geometry of the Revell Batholith by constrained geophysical modelling, NW Ontario, Canada
    The Revell batholith is located within the Western Wabigoon terrane of the Superior Province, Northwestern Ontario, Canada, and is a potential site for a deep geological repository (DGR). This batholith is considered to have favourable geoscientific characteristics for hosting a DGR, including a sufficient volume of relatively homogenous rock. The subsurface geometry of the batholith plays an important role in determining its volume, as well as assessing regional-scale hydraulics, rock mechanics, and glacial stress disturbances on the bedrock, which are other important features and processes that can impact the batholith over the timeframes of concern for long-term storage of used nuclear fuel. Subsurface geometry is complicated to unravel, and surface mapping alone is inadequate to obtain the information at depth. However, gravity, magnetic, or seismic data can be used to enhance understanding by approximating the geometry. This study aims to refine the subsurface geometry and distribution of the Revell batholith from a constrained forward and inverse geophysical model, incorporating high-resolution geophysical data together with a compilation of historic and recent geological field data. The Revell batholith was previously cited as a flat-based pluton with a depth of 1.6 km, where our findings suggest the batholith is deeper than previously thought, with an uneven contact geometry at its base that extends slightly deeper than 3.5 km. Model uncertainties were assessed by varying probabilistic constraints on volume overlap/commonality and shape within GeoModellerâ„¢. Results indicate that overall batholith-greenstone contact is generally unchanged when the geological constraints are varied, providing a high degree of confidence that the Revell batholith has a sufficient volume of relatively homogeneous bedrock.
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