Geology, geochemistry and mineralogy of the lignite-hosted Ambassador palaeochannel uranium and multi-element deposit, Gunbarrel Basin, Western Australia.

Autor: Douglas, Grant, Butt, Charles, Gray, David
Předmět:
Zdroj: Mineralium Deposita; Oct2011, Vol. 46 Issue 7, p761-787, 27p
Abstrakt: The Ambassador U and multi-element deposit occurs on the SW margin of the Gunbarrel Basin, Western Australia. Low-grade, flat-lying U mineralization averaging about 2 m thick at 0.03% U occurs in lignites at the redox front at the base of the weathering profile within a laterally extensive palaeochannel network. Uranium is principally associated with organic matter within the lignitic matrix, although rare discrete U minerals, such as coffinite and uraninite, are also present. The lignite is also enriched in a suite of other elements, principally base metals and sulphur, with concentrations of 0.3 ≥ 1% Cu, Pb, Ni, Co, Zn and total rare earth elements (REE) in some samples. Other element enrichments include: Cr, Cs, Sc, Se, Ta, Ti, Th, V and Zr as detrital heavy minerals of Zr, Ti and REE (oxides and silicates) or authigenic minerals of Cu, Bi, Pb, Zn, Ni, Se, Hg, Ti, Cr, Tl, V, U and REE (sulphides, vanadates, selenides, oxides, chlorides and native metals) and diffuse lignite impregnations. The Ambassador deposit probably formed from the convergence of redox-active weathering processes to unique source/host rocks, constrained within the palaeochannel. A proximal source of U and trace elements of lamproite/carbonatite origin is probable, as constrained by U-Pb isotope and U-Th disequilibria studies. Uranium and other metals were precipitated syngenetically with organic matter as it was deposited during a humid phase in the Late Eocene. Remobilization subsequently concentrated the metals in the upper 2 m of the lignite. This may have occurred during one or more periods of weathering and associated diagenesis, with the latest episode in the last 300,000 years. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Complementary Index