The economic importance of Carlin-type gold deposits is complicated by the concealed nature of stratiform gold-bearing zones and their occurrence at depths of several tens of meters or more below the present-day surface. This necessitates the use of a wide range of technologies and unconventional, including cost-effective and environmentally friendly, exploration methods to delineate potentially prospective areas. This study explores the possibilities of applying remote sensing methods to organize prospecting and exploration activities for targeting Carlin-type deposits in a more efficient and cost-effective way. The location of Carlin-type gold deposits within areas of orogenic and post-orogenic magmatism, mantle plumes, and linear crustal structures—as demonstrated by previous research in the Nevada and South China metallogenic provinces—may serve as a basis for developing a conceptual model of their distribution. To this end, we developed the GeoNEM (Geodynamic Numeric Environmental Modeling) software in Python, which enables the analysis of the formation of fold and fault structures, melt emplacement and contamination, as well as the duration and rate of geodynamic processes. GeoNEM is based on the computational geodynamics “marker-in-cell” (MIC) method, which treats geological media as extremely high-viscosity fluids. Locations of the brittle deformations of the crust, the formation of which was simulated numerically, can be detected through lineament analysis of remote sensing images. The spatial distribution of such structures—lineaments—serves as a predictive criterion for assessing the prospectivity of territories for Carlin-type gold deposits. It has been demonstrated that remote sensing provides a modern level of efficiency, cost-effectiveness, and comprehensiveness in approaching the exploration and assessment of new Carlin-type gold deposits. This is particularly important in the context of rational resource utilization and cost reduction.
Shevyrev et al. (Wed,) studied this question.