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Geology and mineralization of the Wyoming Province

January 1, 1991

The Wyoming Province is an Archean craton which underlies portions of Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Utah, and much of Wyoming. The cratonic block consists of Archean age granite-gneiss with interspersed greenstone belts and related supracrustal terranes exposed in the cores of several Laramide uplifts. Resources found in the Province and in the adjacent accreted Proterozoic terrane include banded iron formation, Au, Pt, Pd, W, Sn, Cr, Ni, Zn, Cu, and diamonds. The Province shows many similarities to the mineral-rich cratons of the Canadian shield, the Rhodesian and Transvaal cratons of southern Africa, and the Pilbara and Yilgarn blocks of Western Australia, where much of the world's precious and strategic metal and gemstone resources are located.

Publication Year 1991
Title Geology and mineralization of the Wyoming Province
Authors W.D. Hausel, B.R. Edwards, P. J. Graff
Publication Type Conference Paper
Publication Subtype Conference Paper
Index ID 70016948
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse