Matthew Manor
Matthew Manor completed his BSc degree at the University of Minnesota Duluth (USA) in 2012 and his MSc degree at the University of British Columbia Vancouver (Canada) in 2014.
His MSc research was under the supervision of Drs. James Scoates (University of British Columbia), Graham Nixon (British Columbia Geological Survey), and Doreen Ames (Geological Survey of Canada, Ottawa) and focused on the genesis of the Late Cretaceous ultramafic-hosted Giant Mascot Ni–CU–platinum group element (PGE) deposit in southwestern British Columbia. Matthew utilized field mapping, petrology, sulfide geochemistry, and geochronology to constrain the mineralogy, textures, and timing of the Ni–Cu–PGE mineralization in a convergent margin ultramafic intrusion.
Following his MSc, Matthew pursued additional research at the University of British Columbia, worked in the mineral exploration industry, and took an academic break in 2016.
In the Fall 2017 Matthew began a PhD with Dr. Stephen Piercey at Memorial University of Newfoundland (Canada) where his current research focuses on the petrology, lithogeochemistry, and U–Pb geochronology of felsic volcanic and intrusive rocks in the Finlayson Lake volcanogenic massive sulfide (VMS) district, southeastern Yukon (Canada).
Matthew uses a combination of bulk rock and in situ geochronological and geochemical data from felsic-hosted zircon, monazite, and apatite in VMS-hosting and VMS-barren stratigraphy to define new prospectivity criteria.
The results of this study will provide a new stratigraphic framework for Late Devonian to Early Mississippian volcanic and plutonic activity in the Finlayson Lake district and add new perspectives on the formation of VMS deposits in the Yukon, on the crustal evolution of the northern Canadian Cordillera, and will contribute to our understanding of the global-scale interplay between tectonics, magmatism, and VMS genesis.