213 research outputs found

    Geophysical and Geochemical Evidence for a New Mafic Magmatic Province Within the Northwest Shelf of Australia

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    The formation of mafic magmatic provinces are significant geological events that can drive mass extinctions and continental rifting and can influence basin evolution, petroleum prospectivity and mineralization. Buried magmatic provinces, however, are rarely identified and difficult to define. The Northwest Shelf of Australia contains large volumes of potentially interconnected mafic igneous material across several sedimentary basins. However, limited study and a lack of surface exposure have prevented detailed description and classification of these rocks. In this study, the distribution and composition of these mafic igneous rocks are described using an integrated geophysical and geochemical approach, which included over 10,000 km line length of 2D seismic data, well log data and chemical analysis of samples from 14 wells across the Browse, Roebuck, Canning and North Carnarvon basins. Using this combined data set, we demonstrate interconnectivity of buried mafic igneous rocks across the Northwest Shelf and calculate a total surface area exceeding 280,000 km2 and a cumulative minimum volume of ∼140,000 km3. Petrology and geochemistry of samples indicate they are basaltic and doleritic with alkaline and sub-alkaline compositions and formed in a continental rift setting. Collectively, the igneous rocks meet the criteria for classification as a mafic magmatic province (MMP) and closely match the criteria required for classification as a large igneous province (LIP). Emplacement of the newly defined Northwest Shelf MMP may represent hotspot magmatism that could have initiated rifting of the Cimmerian Block from NW Australia during the Permian and could have potential for future, large scale CO2 sequestration and storage

    The role of zircon in hydrothermal heavy REE mineralisation: The case for unconformity-related ore deposits of north-west Australia

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    Zircon is hailed for its chemical and physical durability, but can undergo extensive chemical and structural modification due to radiation damage via the emission of alpha (α) particles, and subsequent low-temperature hydrothermal alteration. Here, we investigate Archean zircons from arkosic metasediments of the Browns Range Metamorphics (BRM) to evaluate their role in the formation of local unconformity-related heavy rare earth element (REE) ore deposits, within the Browns Range Dome, Western Australia. We determine that the heavy REE inventory of the BRM are primarily hosted in zircon, and that these zircons have a wide range of major element totals (77 to ~100 wt%, including low SiO2 and ZrO2 contents), and high and variable ‘nonformula’ components (U, Th, Y, REE, Nb, P, Al, Ca, Fe, Ti, F and OH− or H2O). Concentrations of Y + REE in some cases exceed 8 wt%. Extensive radiation damage (metamictisation) is confirmed by structural features including porous and amorphous domains, cavities, and voids. The lack of regional thermal events over an extended period likely prevented thermal annealing of these radiation-damaged zircons. Uptake of non-formula elements in metamict zircon, most likely during sedimentation in the late Archean, promoted further radiation damage, such that these grains remained highly susceptible to alteration by subsequent hydrothermal fluid circulation. We propose that the unconformity-related REE mineralisation was formed by saline fluids leaching Y + REE (and possibly P) from metamict zircon in the BRM, followed by ore mineral precipitation in fault zones near, and along the regional unconformity. More broadly, this model of ore formation may be relevant to other basin-hosted mineral systems, and could be used to guide exploration for unconformity-related REE deposits in Australia, and globally.Jessica M.J. Walsh, Carl Spandle

    The unique Wolverine HREE deposit, Browns Range area, Western Australia

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    The Wolverine deposit is the largest of a number of REE ore bodies located in the Browns Range area of the Tanami region, Western Australia. These deposits collectively represent one of the worlds’ richest sources of dysprosium and other critical HREE. The Wolverine deposit consists of xenotime [(Y,REE)PO4] and minor florencite [(REEAl3(PO4)2(OH)6] mineralisation in hydrothermal lodes within massive arkosic sandstones. Small alkali granite and pegmatite bodies also intruded the sandstone in the region. Steeply dipping mineralisation is associated with silicification at major fault junctions, and occurs mostly as; 1) high grade, low tonnage lodes with large (>10m long and 1m wide) veins and chaotic breccias of massive, anhedral xenotime (±quartz, ±hematite, ±sericite), and; 2) low grade, probably higher tonnage disseminated mm-scale xenotime-quartz veins and crackle breccias in which xenotime grains occur in a number of morphological types, mainly blade-like and pyramidal overgrowth on pre-existing xenotime grains. U-Pb dating and isotopic analysis of detrital zircon grains from arkose samples from across the district yielded a single age population of ~3.1 (±~0.1) Ga (corrected for lead loss), which is interpreted to be the maximum depositional age of the sandstones. This age is significantly older than the granitic rocks in the region ( ca. 1.8 to 2.5 Ga), indicating that there is (previously unknown) Mesoarchean basement within the North Australian Craton. Highly unradiogenic Hf isotope data for these zircons combined with unradiogenic Nd isotope values for ore xenotime indicate that old (Early Archean or Hadean?) crustal components contributed to the formation of ~3.1 Ga basement rocks and potentially the xenotime ore bodies. Work is ongoing to understand the temporal evolution of the deposit, the source of the REE (i.e., mantle versus old crustal) and the processes of transport and precipitation of HREE to form the deposit

    New age constraints for the Tommy Creek domain of the Mount Isa Inlier, Australia

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    The Tommy Creek Domain is a complex, yet little studied, terrane in the Eastern Subprovince of the Mount Isa Province, northwest Queensland Australia. In this study, we take advantage of modern low-cost and rapid geochronology techniques to undertake an iterative dating approach integrated with detailed fieldwork to define the ages and extents of numerous lithologies and units of the Tommy Creek Domain. This includes some units not previously identified, lithologies previously grouped together based on field observations but now shown to have multiple distinct ages and dates not commonly represented in Mount Isan time–space plots. We identify an episode of felsic magmatism at ca 1640 Ma, and multimodal intrusions (ca 1615 Ma) immediately preceding the onset of the Isan Orogeny. A major rock package of the Tommy Creek Domain, the Milo beds, are characterised here as the youngest pre-Isan Orogeny sedimentary unit in the Eastern Subprovince (1660–1620 Ma), confirming that sedimentation and possibly rifting continued after deposition of the Soldiers Cap, Mount Albert and Kuridala groups (ca 1690–1650 Ma) before the onset of the Isan Orogeny (ca 1600 Ma). The Milo beds are thus age equivalent to the Mount Isa and McNamara groups of the Western Succession. There is evidence of a compositional shift in sedimentation coincident with the ca 1640 Ma Riversleigh Inversion event, previously only observed in the Western Subprovince in the Lawn Hill Platform. The application of geochronology as part of the mapping workflow can assist with differentiating geological units in terranes where field evidence is ambiguous and can aid in the focusing of objectives for field campaigns to enable the best possible interpretations to be made

    Psychopolitics: Peter Sedgwick’s legacy for mental health movements

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    This paper re-considers the relevance of Peter Sedgwick's Psychopolitics (1982) for a politics of mental health. Psychopolitics offered an indictment of ‘anti-psychiatry’ the failure of which, Sedgwick argued, lay in its deconstruction of the category of ‘mental illness’, a gesture that resulted in a politics of nihilism. ‘The radical who is only a radical nihilist’, Sedgwick observed, ‘is for all practical purposes the most adamant of conservatives’. Sedgwick argued, rather, that the concept of ‘mental illness’ could be a truly critical concept if it was deployed ‘to make demands upon the health service facilities of the society in which we live’. The paper contextualizes Psychopolitics within the ‘crisis tendencies’ of its time, surveying the shifting welfare landscape of the subsequent 25 years alongside Sedgwick's continuing relevance. It considers the dilemma that the discourse of ‘mental illness’ – Sedgwick's critical concept – has fallen out of favour with radical mental health movements yet remains paradigmatic within psychiatry itself. Finally, the paper endorses a contemporary perspective that, while necessarily updating Psychopolitics, remains nonetheless ‘Sedgwickian’

    In-situ Lu-Hf geochronology of calcite

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    Published: 8 June 2022The ability to constrain the age of calcite formation is of great utility to the Earth science community, due to the ubiquity of calcite across a wide spectrum of geological systems. Here, we present the first in situ laser ablation inductively coupled tandem quadrupole mass spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS/MS) Lu–Hf ages for calcite, demonstrating geologically meaningful ages for iron oxide copper gold (IOCG) and skarn mineralisation, carbonatite intrusion, and low-grade metamorphism. The analysed samples range in age between ca. 0.9 and ca. 2 Ga with uncertainties between 1.7 % and 0.6 % obtained from calcite with Lu concentrations as low as ca. 0.5 ppm. The Lu–Hf system in calcite appears to be able to preserve primary precipitation ages over a significant amount of geological time, although further research is required to constrain the closure temperature. The in situ approach allows calcite to be rapidly dated while maintaining its petrogenetic context with mineralisation and other associated mineral processes. Therefore, LA-ICP-MS/MS Lu–Hf dating of calcite can be used to resolve the timing of complex mineral paragenetic sequences that are a feature of many ancient rock systems.Alexander Simpson, Stijn Glorie, Martin Hand, Carl Spandler, Sarah Gilbert, and Brad Cav

    New Strategies for Research in Clinical Practice: A focus on self–harm.

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    This article suggests new ways of approaching clinical-based research in an era of evidence-based practice. Using the example of self-harm, we identify three distinct problems with current dominant approaches to research in this area. These include insufficient clarity about target issues, an overreliance on predetermined outcomes which prioritise behavioural measures (such as self-harm cessation) and an undue focus on treatment techniques. We argue that clinical research requires flexible, user-centred and practice-based methods, informed by a focus on principles instead of techniques. Therefore, we outline key practice-based principles that we argue need to be embedded within clinical research strategies. We then demonstrate how traditional behavioural approaches to research can be enriched with more qualitative cognitive and emotionally based data. We conclude that such strategies provide thickened, meaningful and context-specific research which is more relevant for service commissioners, clinicians and service users

    Contesting the psychiatric framing of ME / CFS

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    ME/CFS is a medically contested illness and its understanding, framing and treatment has been the subject of heated debate. This paper examines why framing the condition as a psychiatric issue—what we refer to as ‘psychiatrisation’—has been so heavily contested by patients and activists. We argue that this contestation is not simply about stigmatising mental health conditions, as some have suggested, but relates to how people diagnosed with mental illness are treated in society, psychiatry and the law. We highlight the potentially harmful consequences of psychiatrisation which can lead to people’s experiential knowledge being discredited. This stems, in part, from a psychiatric-specific form of ‘epistemic injustice’ which can result in unhelpful, unwanted and forced treatments. This understanding helps explain why the psychiatrisation of ME/CFS has become the focus of such bitter debate and why psychiatry itself has become such a significant field of contention, for both ME/CFS patients and mental health service users/survivors. Notwithstanding important differences, both reject the way psychiatry denies patient explanations and understandings, and therefore share a collective struggle for justice and legitimation. Reasons why this shared struggle has not resulted in alliances between ME and mental health activists are noted

    Conducting sexualities research: An outline of emergent issues and case studies from ten wellcome-funded projects [version 1; peer review: 3 approved]

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    © 2019 Kneale D et al. This letter seeks to synthesise methodological challenges encountered in a cohort of Wellcome Trust-funded research projects focusing on sexualities and health. The ten Wellcome Trust projects span a diversity of gender and sexual orientations and identities, settings; institutional and non-institutional contexts, lifecourse stages, and explore a range of health-related interventions. As researchers, we originate from a breadth of disciplinary traditions, use a variety of research methods and data sources. Despite this breadth, four common themes are found across the projects: (i) inclusivity representations and representativeness, (ii) lumping together of diverse groups, (iii) institutions and closed settings (iv) ethical and governance barriers
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