Synchronous egress and ingress fluid flow related to compressional reactivation of basement faults: the Phoenix and Gryphon uranium deposits, southeastern Athabasca Basin, Saskatchewan, Canada

2017 ◽  
Vol 53 (2) ◽  
pp. 277-292 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zenghua Li ◽  
Guoxiang Chi ◽  
Kathryn M. Bethune ◽  
Khalifa Eldursi ◽  
David Thomas ◽  
...  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Khalifa Eldursi ◽  
Luc Scholtes ◽  
Marianne Conin ◽  
Fabrice Golfier ◽  
Julien Mercadier ◽  
...  

<p>The epigenetic uranium deposits in the eastern part of the Athabasca Basin are classified as unconformity-related ore deposits. Their explicit spatial association to reactivated basement faults is observed within the regional structural NNE trend Wollaston-Mudjatik transition zone, marked by elongated dravite, illite, and chlorite alteration zones. Accordingly, geochemical studies have advocated a circulation and focalization of large amount of one or more fluids to carry and precipitate aqueous chemical materials. At the deposit-scale, the uranium deposits are found mainly at the intersection between two or more fault sets, and described as elongated-like bodies varying in orientation from E-W to NNE direction along the regional transitional zone. Furthermore, some orebodies show a change of orientation and dip of their structures. Thus, what is the hydro-mechanical response of reactivated and inherited fault architecture (e.g., intersection zone) under different stress states (e.g., reverse, strike-slip, and normal faulting regime), and its potential contribution to the shape and orientation of orebodies at deposit scale?</p><p>Using hydro-mechanical numerical modeling, this project demonstrates the role that fault intersections play in controlling mineralized fluids by examining the various fluid flow patterns observed when reactivated intersected faults are under various stress states. Numerical modeling is performed using 3-Dimensional Distinct Element Code (3DEC). The numerical models are subdivided into two categories: 1) simplified 3-D models of two intersecting faults, 2) 3-D complex models of fault network at different deposits sites (e.g., the Cigar Lake deposit). While the first simple models attempt to evaluate the effects of intersection angle, burial depth, fluid pressure, basin permeability and stress states on the fluid flow patterns; the second models investigate the stress state under which certain orebodies may have formed.</p><p>Our preliminary results from simplified models show that at defined intersection angles, the fluid flow deviates from the main fault toward the secondary fault at their intersection point. The deviation in fluid flow is referred to the value of intersection angle at which the shear stress varies along the secondary fault, leading to the opening of secondary fault. Additionally, the burial depth does not affect the flow along the basement faults, whereas, the overlying highly permeable basin reduces the horizontal flow along the basement faults toward the intersection zone, and reorients a part of the flow toward the basin.  In the complex models (the Cigar Lake model), considering a compressional regime, the E-W fault set is reactivated once the maximum stress is oriented N40W to N65W, which is in agreement with field observations.</p>


2021 ◽  
pp. geochem2020-029
Author(s):  
M. Rabiei ◽  
G. Chi ◽  
E.G. Potter ◽  
V. Tschirhart ◽  
C. MacKay ◽  
...  

The Patterson Lake corridor (PLC) in the southwestern margin of the Athabasca Basin hosts several high-grade uranium deposits. These deposits are located in the basement up to 900 m below the unconformity surface, raising questions about their affiliation with typical unconformity-related uranium (URU) deposits elsewhere in the basin. Based on cross-cutting relationships four pre- and three syn- to post-mineralization quartz generations were identified. Fluid inclusion analyses indicate that pre-mineralization fluids have salinities ranging from 0.2 to 27.2 Wt% NaCl equiv. (avg. 9.0 Wt%), whereas syn-mineralization fluids have salinities ranging from 8.8 to 33.8 Wt% NaCl + CaCl2 (avg. 25.4 Wt%), with NaCl- and CaCl2-rich varieties. The homogenization temperatures (Th) of fluid inclusions from pre-mineralization quartz range from 80 ° to 244 ℃ (avg. 147 ℃), and from syn-mineralization quartz range from 64 ° to 248 ℃ (avg. 128 ℃). Fluid boiling is indicated by the co-development of liquid-dominated and vapor-dominated fluid inclusions within individual fluid inclusion assemblages (FIA) from the syn-mineralization quartz and is related to episodic fluid pressure drops caused by reactivation of basement faults. Our results indicate that composition and P-T conditions of the ore fluids in the PLC are comparable to those of typical URU deposits in the Athabasca Basin, indicating that the uranium deposits in the PLC formed under similar hydrothermal conditions. Episodic reactivation of basement faults was an important driving force to draw uraniferous fluids from the basin and reducing fluids from the basement to the mineralization sites, forming deep basement-hosted deposits.Thematic collection: This article is part of the Uranium Fluid Pathways collection available at: https://www.lyellcollection.org/cc/uranium-fluid-pathwaysSupplementary material:https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.c.5510179


1989 ◽  
Vol 26 (3) ◽  
pp. 490-498 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. K. Kyser ◽  
M. R. Wilson ◽  
G. Ruhrmann

The Key Lake unconformity-type uranium deposit occurs in a shear zone where it intersects the unconformity between Archean and Aphebian gneisses and the overlying Proterozoic Athabasca Group sandstones. The roots of the Key Lake and many other unconformity-type uranium deposits in the Athabasca basin are close to gneisses rich in graphite and most deposits have small amounts of carbonaceous materials (bitumen and hydrocarbon buttons) within and around altered basement and sandstone ore zones. In many Athabasca uranium deposits, hydrothermal fluids have destroyed graphite disseminated in the strongly altered gneisses in the vicinity of the deposits, prompting some to suggest that graphite was converted to CH4, which reduced and precipitated the uranium and partially condensed to form bitumen. The δ13C values of graphite collected from unaltered and altered gneisses around the Key Lake deposit have a limited range (−25 ± 5) and are not a function of distance from the mineralization or the intensity of alteration or deformation. The uniformity of these δ13C values suggests that the destruction of graphite was due predominantly to oxidation by basinal fluids from the sandstone and that the graphite near the deposits did not react to form substantial amounts of 12C-rich phases such as CH4. Most of the bitumen samples, which have higher H/C ratios than the graphite, have δ13C values identical to those of the graphite (−25 ± 5). The similarity in the isotopic compositions of carbon in the bitumen and in the graphite indicates that the bitumen formed from degradation of graphite as a result of reactions with no significant isotopic fractionations, such as ones involving radiolysis of graphite. The hydrocarbon buttons and a few samples of bitumen have petrographic relations and 13C/12C ratios (δ13C values less than −30) that are indicative of reduction of graphite by H2 produced from water by radiolysis. Graphite in these deposits did not play a central role as a reducing agent for uranium, rather it represents a critical structural factor by providing shear zones along which fluid flow can be focussed.


2003 ◽  
Vol 80 (2-3) ◽  
pp. 241-258 ◽  
Author(s):  
G Lorilleux ◽  
M Cuney ◽  
M Jébrak ◽  
J.C Rippert ◽  
P Portella

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