

PDAC-SEG
Student Minerals Colloquium
The Student Minerals Colloquium (SMC) brings together geoscience students and industry professionals to highlight innovative student research on projects essential for the successful evolution of the modern mining industry.
Meet the students at their posters on Tuesday March 4, from 10:00 am - 12 noon. A panel of industry professionals will judge the posters and three winners from each of the BSc, MSc, PhD categories will receive $500, $400 and $300 respectively.
Join us at the SMC Awards & Reception on Tuesday, March 4, 2025 from 3:30 p.m. to 5 p.m. at the Northern Lights Learning Hub in the Trade Show North for networking and to celebrate the winners in each category.
Explore Student Research
Showing 1-8 of 8 results
Unconventional critical metal enrichment in post-collisional settings, example of the Gull Ridge Ni-Cu-V-Ti mineralization, Baie Verte Peninsula, Newfoundland
Department of Earth Sciences, Memorial University of Newfoundland
The role of hydrothermal processes in the genesis of the Alaskan-type Turnagain mafic-ultramafic complex, British Columbia
Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, McGill University
Mineralogical and Geochemical Relationships of Spodumene-Rich Pegmatites with Host Pelitic Schists: Insights from the Trieste Project, James Bay, Quebec
Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, McGill University
Petrogenesis of a Chromite Autolith in the Platiniferous J-M Reef of the Stillwater Complex, Montana, USA
Department of Earth and Environmental Science, University of Ottawa
Chromitite Petrogenesis in the Muskox Layered Intrusion, Nunavut, Canada
Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Ottawa
Volatile signatures in the Sudbury Igneous Complex magmatic Ni-Cu-PGE deposits: Implications for sulfide melt differentiation and precious metal mineralisation
Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Ottawa
A study of the nature and distribution of precious-metal minerals in the Norman West Deposit, Sudbury, Ontario: Implications to geoformational processes and precious-metal deportment
Harquail School of Earth Sciences, Laurentian University
Molten salts as agents of metal enrichment in IOA deposits
Department of Earth Sciences, University of Toronto