RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:CW fossicker bread crumb trailIskyhigh,
Your yellow fault has the same end point as mine at the waist of the NS dykes (the hairpin). But mine is hugging the southern edge about 2km (follow the strip of white rock, which is running near the dark brown cooya pooya hills in the SE).
There is another possibility. Starting at the northern tip of the hairpin (el. 121m) there is another ridge/dyke going east but the elevation drops quickly (the end rock is at 86m). Along this ridge is another creek bed heading toward Harding River. This could be another fault?
So, the potential "plain" area (sourrounded by the cooya pooya hills where Au-bearing coglomerates are expected would be about 2x the 7 sq km area (green outlined you have drawn on some previous map). Just extend the top (green line) to cover the area above the top of the hairpin (on the left side).
On Slide 15 there is a blue/purple curvy line just north of the red snake trail. Any idea what it is? creek bed, fault?
It stops short of the rail line (?) and continues on the other side. I believe the rail and the highway (142) run next to each other in this area. Hope that Leo would know the answer.
Cheers,
GH
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Iskyhigh wrote: For sure fault goes SE too.
Maybe this would be better. It is just an extrapolation of the 3d model into CW, and continuation based on color.. No doubt the paleo island they ran into also extends some into CW, but QH has commented some re: what they were finding.
The E/W fault would still be at the stream bed.
It would be nice to know where this mile 49 or whatever is on the Hwy.
goldhunter11 wrote: Iskyhigh,
Very nice pistures...and thanks for the tips, will try impur.com someday.
- First picture: Yes it's the dyke (I call it the hairpin). Near the bottom there is a narrow portion (the waist) which looks like a pass if you zoom in GE. The fault seems to start from there, so I would bring the blue line down to go through that pass, unless you have seen something else that would support your conclusion.
- Second picture: Near the top of your red border, at the sharp turn of the creek bed (fault/black line on your diagram) there could be another fault line running in the SE direction (see that creek bed between the two cooya pooya blobs?)
Cheers,
GH