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Publication Year
1985
Series
Report of Investigations
Abstract

Silver deposits occur in Precambrian, Permian, and Cretaceous red-bed sequences near Van Horn, Texas. These deposits are geochemically similar and contain economically important quantities of silver, copper, and lead, as well as anomalously high amounts of arsenic, zinc, cadmium, and molybdenum. Gold is not enriched. Primary minerals include chalcopyrite, tennantite-tetrahedrite, bornite, galena, sphalerite, acanthite, pyrite, marcasite, barite, and calcite. The deposits are dominantly steeply dipping veins. Strata-bound occurrences are near veins or closely spaced fractures.

Publication Year
1985
Series
Report of Investigations
Abstract

Many modern shore zones comprise a continuum of depositional environments that encompass both strandplain and barrier-island systems. Strandplains are further subdivided into two classes: sand-rich beach-ridge plains and mud-rich chenier plains. Tertiary shorezone systems of the Texas Gulf Coast Basin contain a significant proportion of the Texas oil resource in clastic reservoirs. These reservoirs display better-than-average oil recovery efficiencies.