Figure 47a. North America 550 km seismic tomography exploration targeting.

North America metal mine and oil and gas targeting using seismic tomography at 550 km depth. AusIMM webinar part 8.

North American structural geology with exploration targeting plans for oil and gas and metals. Linears and rings show brittle structural geology at 550 km depth – right in the middle of the mobile mantle. See the AusIMM webinar on; https://www.ausimm.com/videos/community-event/south-west-wageoscience-society—digital-tech-talk-new-discoveries-in-the-structural-geology-mineralization–exploration-targeting-of-north-america/ .

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Figure 41. Carlin/Bingham Canyon area interpreted, enhanced seismic tomography at 300 km depth with mines overlain.

Butte/Carlin/Bingham Canyon mining area. EagleEye ultra-enhanced Seismic tomography at 300 km depth. AusIMM webinar Part 7.

Butte/Carlin/Bingham Canyon mining area EagleEye seismic tomography at 300 km depth. Exploration targeting.

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Figure 37. North America interpreted, EagleEye enhanced seismic tomography at 300 km depth with mining fields overlain.

North America Formation and Mineralisation, AusIMM webinar part 6. Research using EagleEye enhancement showing structural geology from the surface to 2,850 km depth.

This is the EagleEye enhanced plan of the 300 km depth seismic tomography.
North American geology is still very brittle at 300 km depth. How can this be possible as we are supposed to be in the middle of the mobile upper mantle? There is a lot of detailed structural geology seen.
If by using this detailed structural geology we can crack why these huge mines are there and what structural geology they follow we will have an exploration plan for finding new fields, in this area and elsewhere in the world!

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