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And finally, the book you recommended Ore Deposits in the United States 1933-1967 will take care of: 6. Economic geology- ore formation and prospecting methods.
Understanding Earth by John GrotzingerGeochemistry : pathways and processesHistorical Geology: Evolution of Earth and Life Through Time Ore Deposits in the United States 1933-1967 Ok, so that is what I have so far. Please correct me if I am wrong but Understanding Earth will explain precisely: 1. An understanding of basic geologic processes. 2. An understanding of geologic environments.Geochemistry : pathways and processes will take care of:3. An understanding of geochemical concepts, especially solubility in various Eh and pH conditions.4. Knowledge of the geologic time scale. Historical Geology: Evolution of Earth and Life Through Time will take care of: 5. Once you have mastered these concepts, you can move on to historical geology and the concepts of geologic paleo-environments.And finally, the books you recommended An Introduction to Economic Geology and Its Environmental Impact and Ore Geology and Industrial Minerals, and Introduction will take care of: 6. Economic geology- ore formation and prospecting methods.
I assume you have seen the Toaster Project?http://www.thomasthwaites.com/thomas/toaster/page2.htm
I'm Thomas Thwaites and I'm trying to build a toaster, from scratch - beginning by mining the raw materials and ending with a product that Argos sells for only £3.99. A toaster. ... The Toaster Project has been exhibited at the Royal College of Art SHOW TWO, London...
1. An understanding of basic geologic processes
4. Knowledge of the geologic time scale.
There are a good many courses before you hit mineralogy, and even then, its more about identifying minerals rather than their field associations and locations.
I agree with frethack- you need to assimilate the basics before you can fully understand more specialized fields. Probably 95%+ of commercial iron deposits are Precambrian- and were formed in unique geochemical conditions. Obviously, if you want to find iron ore, you need to know what Precambrian means and how to identify Precambrian rocks. There are also "oolitic" iron deposits (example Silurian rocks in New York).So keep with it.
Obviously, if you want to find iron ore, you need to know what Precambrian means and how to identify Precambrian rocks.