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Mount Read Volcanics

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Cambrian volcanic belt in Western Tasmania

The Mount Read Volcanics is a Cambrian volcanic belt in Western Tasmania.

It is a complex belt due to folding, faulting and a range of tectonic events.

Between 1986 and 1993 a project to research and map the belt was conducted.

Mapping

The component regions within the belt were identified in separate maps:

  • Map 1. Geology of the Mt. Charter-Hellyer area
  • Map 2. Geology of Rosebery - Mount Black area
  • Map 3. Geology of the Henty River - Mount Read area
  • Map 4. Geology of the Mount Murchison area
  • Map 5. Geology of the Tyndall Range area
  • Map 6. Geological compilation map of the Mount Read volcanics & associated rocks, Hellyer to south Darwin Peak Scale 1:100,000
  • Map 7. Geology of the Back Peak - Cradle Mountain Link Road area
  • Map 8. Geology of the Mt. Cattley - Mt. Tor area
  • Map 9. Geology of the Winterbrook - Moina area
  • Map 10. Geology of the Elliott Bay - Mt. Osmund area
  • Map 11. Geology of the Wanderer River - Moores Valley area
  • Map 12. Geology of the D'Aguilar Range area
  • Map 13. Geology of the Mount Jukes - Mt. Darwin area.

Conference excursions

Geological conferences in Australia and Tasmania have had symposiums and excursions to consider aspects of the phenomenon:

  • 1986 - Geological Society of Australia, Tasmanian Division
  • 1990 - Australian Geological Convention, Hobart
  • 1993 - IAVCEI General Assembly, Canberra
  • 2004 - Australian Geological Convention, Hobart

Mining operations

It is a productive mineralised belt that has had profitable copper-silver and gold production of Mount Lyell, Rosebery, and Henty Gold Mine, as well as numerous smaller sites of prospective mineralisation along the West Coast Range.

See also

References

  1. Leaman, D. E. (David Edward); Tasmania. Division of Mines and Mineral Resources; Mt. Read Volcanics Project (1986), Mount Read Volcanics Project : preliminary interpretation report 1985 West Tasmania aeromagnetic survey (Macquarie Harbour South to Elliott Bay), Tasmania Dept. of Resources and Energy, Division of Mines and Mineral Resources, retrieved 19 June 2015
  2. Leaman, D. E. (David Edward); Tasmania. Dept. of Mines; Mt. Read Volcanics Project (1987), Mount Read Volcanics Project mineralisation signature study : geophysics, gravity and magnetics, Tasmania Dept. of Mines, retrieved 5 April 2012
  3. [Geological maps of Tasmania] : [Mount Read Volcanics Project], Geological Survey of Tasmania, Division of Mines and Mineral Resources, Mount Read Volcanics Project, 1986, retrieved 5 July 2023
  4. Large, R.R. (editor) and convenor: P.L.F. Collins (1986) The Mount Read volcanics and associated ore deposits : a symposium, Burnie, November 1986. Hobart : Geological Society of Australia, Tasmanian Division. ISBN 0-7246-1955-0
  5. Corbett, K. D; Large, Ross R; Geological Society of Australia; Australian Geological Convention (10th : 1990 : Hobart, Tas.) (1990), Excursion guide E1 : the Mount Read Volcanics and related ore deposits, s.n, retrieved 5 April 2012{{citation}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  6. Corbett, K. D; McPhie, Jocelyn; Australian Geological Survey Organisation; IAVCEI General Assembly (1993 : Canberra, A.C.T.) (1993), Mount Read volcanics and associated ore deposits, Tasmania : IAVCEI, Canberra 1993 : excursion guide, Australian Geological Survey Organisation, ISBN 978-0-642-19664-4{{citation}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  7. McPhie, J. (Jocelyn); Corbett, K. D; Geological Society of Australia; Australian Geological Convention (17th : 2004 : Hobart, Tas.) (2004), Mount Read volcanics, western Tasmania : field guide A3 : 17 AGC : dynamic earth : past, present and future 2004 : 17th Australian Geological Convention, Hobart, Geological Society of Australia, ISBN 978-1-876125-37-0{{citation}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)

Further reading

Mountains in Tasmania, Australia
Arthur Range
Eastern
Ben Lomond
  • Legges Tor (1,572 m or 5,157 ft)
  • Giblin Peak (1,569 m or 5,148 ft)
  • Markham Heights (1,542 m or 5,059 ft)
  • Hamilton Crags (1,540 m or 5,052 ft)
  • Stacks Bluff (1,527 m or 5,010 ft)
  • Misery Bluff (1,520 m or 4,987 ft)
  • Ossian’s Throne (1,498 m or 4,915 ft)
  • Coalmine Crag (1,498 m or 4,915 ft)
  • Magnet Crag (1,464 m or 4,803 ft)
  • Victoria (1,213 m or 3,980 ft)
Du Cane Range
Eldon Range
Great Western Tiers
Pelion Range
Wellington Range
West Coast Range
  • Murchison (1,275 m or 4,183 ft)
  • Jukes (1,168 m or 3,832 ft)
  • Sedgwick (1,147 m or 3,763 ft)
  • Owen (1,146 m or 3,760 ft)
  • Sorell (1,144 m or 3,753 ft)
  • Read (1,124 m or 3,688 ft)
  • Proprietary Peak (1,103 m or 3,619 ft)
  • Hamilton (1,103 m or 3,619 ft)
  • Darwin (1,031 m or 3,383 ft)
Heemskirk
  • Agnew (848 m or 2,782 ft)
  • Dundas (1,143 m or 3,750 ft)
  • Heemskirk (751 m or 2,464 ft)
  • Zeehan (701 m or 2,300 ft)
Sticht
  • unnamed peak (1,080 m or 3,543 ft)
Tyndall
Not in a defined range
Highest summit elevation in Tasmania
Category
Western region of Tasmania, Australia
Cities and
other settlements
Governance
Mountains
West
Coast
Range
Tyndall
Eldon
  • Eldon Peak
Engineer
  • unnamed peak
Raglan
  • unnamed peak
Sticht
  • unnamed peak
National parks
Rivers
Lakes
Dams
Power stations
Transport
Railways
Locomotives and rolling stock
Railway stations and
former railway stations
Landmarks
Natural
Man-made
People of note
Mining
Books and
newspapers
Other

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