International metallogenic map of Africa-PDF

79,00 

International metallogenic map of Africa-PDF

Scale 1:5,000,000
4 sheets, including 1 for the legend
Total surface area: 172 cm x 222 cm.
Transverse Mercator projection. Bilingual English/French legend.
Published in 2002

Co-publication CCGM-Council for Geoscience (South Africa)

Availability: In stock

Secure payment guaranteed

Description

International metallogenic map of Africa-PDF

Scanned version in high resolution .pdf format, sent by download link.

Note This card is subject to a licence agreement.

This map is also available in digital .pdf format in our catalogue.

A major objective was achieved with the publication of the International Metallogenic Map of Africa-PDF, produced by the Council for Geoscience (Geological Survey of the Republic of South Africa), under the aegis of the CGMW. This map replaces the first edition of the Map of Mineral Deposits of Africa, of which only sheet 1 (NW) was published in 1991. The mineralogical data (location, names of the main deposits, mineral resources present, characteristics of occurrences and size) have been plotted on a geological background based on the 1:5 M International Geological Map of Africa (1985-1990), updated from time to time.

This background shows the chronostratigraphic succession of sedimentary and volcanic sequences and plutonic bodies, the geodynamic framework of orogenic domains and the petrogenetic environment, with a lithological distinction between magmatic and metamorphic rocks. Mineralogical deposits were counted and referenced according to a 5° x 5° latitude/longitude grid.

The GIS data for the map are marketed by the Council for Geoscience (www.geoscience.org.za)

International metallogenic map of Africa-PDF

General coordinator: E. C. I. Hammberbeck (deceased in April 2006), Chairman of the CCGM Sub-Commission on Metallogenic Maps until August 2004.
Principal compilers: Mrs. M. Veselinovic-Williams and S. Frost-Killian, Council for Geoscience (Geological Survey of the Republic of South Africa), with contributions from numerous collaborators and editors from African Geological Surveys and universities.

Panier
en_GBEnglish (UK)
Retour en haut