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To: Rocket Red who wrote (124558)7/21/2008 7:24:46 PM
From: E. Charters  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 314006
 
Well the anomalies will be in lakes margins, and swamps that border the lakes. The powder river basin is now uplifted but in its day was the swamp margin of a large inland sea or lake district which covered many miles north south and east west. It was elongated. The thickening may be due to protection from glaciers due to hills and valleys formed at the time, or forming later. Stacking of beds occurred with movement of beds and perhaps with intermittent ages of deposition. The idea that salt beds eroded underneath the coal, causing collapse and protection of the local areas by a valley structures would mean that areas of thickening would be pockety.

We will know more after 40 drill holes. Then we can form the theory.

EC<:-}



To: Rocket Red who wrote (124558)7/21/2008 7:28:54 PM
From: zebra4o1  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 314006
 
Uh oh - nightmare scenario. Aeromag pics up two isolated 'paleolakes' that look like possible kimberlites. GXS drills the areomag targets ...