| Obolenskiy, Alexander A., Rodionov, Sergey M., Dejidmaa, Gunchin, Gerel, Ochir, Hwang, Duk-Hwan, Distanov, Elimir G., Badarch, Gombosuren, Khanchuk, Alexander I., Ogasawara, Masatsugu, Nokleberg, Warren J., Parfenov, Leonid M., Prokopiev, Andrei V., Seminskiy, Zhan V., Smelov, Alexander P., Yan, Hongquan, Birul'kin, Gennandiy V., Davydov, Yuriy V.V., Fridovskiy, Valeriy Yu., Gamyanin, Gennandiy N., Kostin, Alexei V., Letunov, Sergey A., Li, Xujun, Nikitin, Valeriy M., Sotnikov, Sadahisa, Sudo, Vitaly I., Spiridonov, Alexander V., Stepanov, Vitaly A., Sun, Fengyue, Sun, Jiapeng, Sun, Weizhi, Supletsov, Valeriy M., Timofeev, Vladimir F., Tyan, Oleg A., Vetluzhskikh, Valeriy G., Wakita, Koji, Yakovlev, Yakov V., Zorina, Lydia M. (2003) Preliminary metallogenic belt and mineral deposit maps for northeast Asia. Open-File Report 2003-204. US Geological Survey doi:10.3133/ofr03204 | Report (issue) | from earth science agencies and universities in Russia, Mongolia, Northeastern China, South Korea, Japan...metallogenic subzone (2 to 20 by 103 km2); and (6) ore district (0.4 to 2.0 by 103 km2). However, often determination...metallogenic system versus metallogenic zone, or ore district versus deposit-hosting subzone. For this study...are employed: metallogenic belt and contained district. Generally, the size of metallogenic belts is...occurrence, mineral deposit, prospect, and (or) mine. For the compilation, synthesis, description, and |
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