Apatite nodules as an indicator of depositional environment and ore genesis for the Mesoproterozoic Broken Hill-type Gamsberg Zn?Pb deposit, Namaqua Province, South Africa

2004 ◽  
Vol 39 (2) ◽  
pp. 189-203 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marcel Stalder ◽  
Abraham Rozendaal
2007 ◽  
Vol 42 (5) ◽  
pp. 537-549 ◽  
Author(s):  
Craig R. McClung ◽  
Jens Gutzmer ◽  
Nicolas J. Beukes ◽  
Klaus Mezger ◽  
Harald Strauss ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

2017 ◽  
Vol 120 (3) ◽  
pp. 447-458
Author(s):  
H. de V. Wickens ◽  
D.I. Cole

Abstract The Permian Kookfontein Formation forms part of the upper Ecca Group in the southwestern part of the main Karoo Basin of South Africa. It occupies a stratigraphic position between the underlying Skoorsteenberg Formation and the overlying Waterford Formation, with its regional extent limited to the cut-off boundaries of the Skoorsteenberg Formation. The Kookfontein Formation has an average thickness of 200 m, coarsens upwards, and predominantly comprises dark grey shale, siltstone and thin- to thick-bedded, fine- to very fine-grained, feldspathic litharenite. Characteristic upward-coarsening and thickening successions and syn-sedimentary deformation features reflect rapid deposition and progradation of a predominantly fluvially-dominated prodelta and delta front slope environment. The upward increase in the abundance of wave–ripple marks further indicates a gradual shallowing of the depositional environment through time. The upper contact with the Waterford Formation is gradational, which indicates a transition from deposition in an unstable upper slope/shelf margin environment to a more stable shelf setting.


1983 ◽  
Vol 47 (345) ◽  
pp. 481-486 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. von Gehlen ◽  
H. Nielsen ◽  
I. Chunnett ◽  
A. Rozendaal

AbstractSulphur isotope ratios in sulphides and baryte from stratabound and stratiform orebodies in a metavolcanic-sedimentary sequence in Namaqualand were found, in part, to be extreme for Precambrian sulphur. Black Mountain, Aggeneys, in the west gave an average for the sulphides of δ34S = +8.9±3.7‰ (9 samples), an average for barytes of +20.6±4.3‰ (3 samples). Broken Hill, Aggeneys, in the centre gave an average for the sulphides of δ34S = +19.8±3.1‰ (19 samples). Gamsberg, in the east, gave an average for the sulphides of δ34S = +29.2±1.8‰ (24 samples), and an average for barytes of +35.4±0.2‰ (2 samples). The δ34S values increase eastward. Their range is strongly on the positive side and does not centre around zero. The Gamsberg barytes and most Gamsberg sulphides have more positive δ34S values than those reported for other Precambrian sulphides and sulphates. We interpret the above sulphur isotope range as being mainly due to the varying contributions of submarine-exhalative sulphide sulphur with δ34S close to zero and bacterially(?) reduced sulphate with strongly positive δ34S, apparently from evaporites in the east. Metamorphism of amphibolite facies grade has partly isotopically re-equilibrated the ore minerals, as indicated by galena-pyrrhotine and sulphide-baryte isotope temperatures from single specimens, but has not destroyed the primary sulphur isotope range indicating pre-existing sulphate concentrations.


Terra Nova ◽  
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stefan Höhn ◽  
Hartwig E. Frimmel ◽  
Vinciane Debaille ◽  
Westley Price
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