A palaeomagnetic study of hydrothermal activity and uranium mineralization at Mt Painter, South Australia

1993 ◽  
Vol 40 (1) ◽  
pp. 87-101 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Idnurm ◽  
C. A. Heinrich
1981 ◽  
Vol 44 (336) ◽  
pp. 371-378 ◽  
Author(s):  
Keith Bell

AbstractAssessment of available geochronological information, as well as new whole-rock Rb-Sr data from several granitoid rocks of Saskatchewan, shows a close relationship between magmatic-metamorphic events in the Hudsonian orogen and uranium mineralization. Most uranium deposits lie to the west of the Needle Falls Shear Zone and occur as either: (i) vein-type deposits or (ii) unconformity-type deposits close to the contact between the Athabasca sediments and their basement. At least two metamorphisms have affected the pre-Athabasca rocks: the Kenoran at about 2500 Ma ago, and the more pervasive ‘main’ Hudsonian event at 1740 Ma. A much younger thermal event (perhaps associated with uplift and cooling) at 1540 Ma is also indicated. The post-Kenoran K-Ar dates suggest prolonged thermal activity from about 1900 Ma through to about 1500 Ma ago. Granitoid events at 1870 Ma and 1740 Ma ago are outlined by both U-Pb zircon and Rb-Sr whole-rock isochron data. Whole-rock Rb-Sr data from the unmetamorphosed Athabasca sediments suggest an approximate depositional age of 1450±50 Ma, a figure that is consistent with the age of the underlying Hudsonian basement and the truncation of the sediments by the Cree Lake diabase dyke swarm at about 1200–1300 Ma ago. Although several episodes of uranium deposition have been documented, the main ones seem to have occurred at 1860 Ma (syngenetic uraninite in pegmatites), 1740 Ma (the Beaverlodge vein-type deposits) and between 1300 and 800 Ma (the epigenetic uranium of the unconformity-type deposits). Whereas the two earlier episodes can be correlated with periods of either magmatic or metamorphic activity, the late Proterozoic episodes cannot. The close agreement between the age of the Cree Lake dyke swarm and the late Proterozoic mineralization suggests that at about 1300 Ma ago possible hydrothermal activity from relatively deep-seated fractures may have been responsible for the solution and transportation of the uranium of the unconformity-type deposits. The period 1300 Ma to about 900 Ma, in other parts of the Canadian Shield, was a time of crustal rifting, basic magmatism, carbonatite activity, and intense deformation. Prior to the deposition of the Athabasca sediments uranium was concentrated by Hudsonian magmatic and metamorphic processes whereas subsequently, transportation and intermittent deposition of the unconformity-type deposits were related to fairly long-lived, low-temperature hydrothermal activity.


2013 ◽  
Vol 58 (34) ◽  
pp. 4319-4328 ◽  
Author(s):  
Huan Hu ◽  
RuCheng Wang ◽  
WeiFeng Chen ◽  
PeiRong Chen ◽  
HongFei Ling ◽  
...  

Minerals ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. 191
Author(s):  
Urs Domnick ◽  
Nigel J. Cook ◽  
Cristiana L. Ciobanu ◽  
Benjamin P. Wade ◽  
Liam Courtney-Davies ◽  
...  

The Blackbush uranium prospect (~12,580 tonnes U at 85 ppm cut-off) is located on the Eyre Peninsula of South Australia. Blackbush was discovered in 2007 and is currently the single example of sediment-hosted uranium mineralisation investigated in any detail in the Gawler Craton. Uranium is hosted within Eocene sandstones of the Kanaka Beds and, subordinately, within a massive saprolite derived from the subjacent Hiltaba-aged (~1585 Ma) granites, affiliated with the Samphire Pluton. Uranium is mainly present as coffinite in different lithologies, mineralisation styles and mineral associations. In the sandstone and saprolite, coffinite occurs intergrown with framboidal Fe-sulphides and lignite, as well as coatings around, and filling fractures within, grains of quartz. Microprobe U–Pb dating of coffinite hosted in sedimentary units yielded a narrow age range, with a weighted average of 16.98 ± 0.16 Ma (343 individual analyses), strongly indicating a single coffinite-forming event at that time. Coffinite in subjacent saprolite generated a broader age range from 28 Ma to 20 Ma. Vein-hosted coffinite yielded similar ages (from 12 to 25 Ma), albeit with a greater range. Uraninite in the vein is distinctly older (42 to 38 Ma). The 17 ± 0.16 Ma age for sandstone-hosted mineralisation roughly coincides with tectonic movement as indicated by the presence of horst and graben structures in the Eocene sedimentary rocks hosting uranium mineralisation but not in stratigraphically younger sedimentary rocks. The new ages for hydrothermal minerals support a conceptual genetic model in which uranium was initially sourced from granite bedrock, then pre-concentrated into veins within that granite, and is subsequently dissolved and reprecipitated as coffinite in younger sediments as a result of low-temperature hydrothermal activity associated with tectonic events during the Tertiary. The ages obtained here for uranium minerals within the different lithologies in the Blackbush prospect support a conceptual genetic model in which tectonic movement along the reactivated Roopena Fault, which triggered the flow of U-rich fluids into the cover sequence. The timing of mineralisation provides information that can help optimise exploration programs for analogous uranium resources within shallow buried sediments across the region. The model presented here can be predicted to apply to sediment-hosted U-mineralisation in cratons elsewhere.


Minerals ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 52
Author(s):  
Ming-Kuan Qin ◽  
Shao-Hua Huang ◽  
Jia-Lin Liu ◽  
Zhang-Yue Liu ◽  
Qiang Guo ◽  
...  

The evolution characteristics of hydrothermal activity and superimposed uranium mineralization in the Qianjiadian ore field in southwestern Songliao Basin are still controversial and lack direct evidence. In this comprehensive study, a detailed identification of dolerite and hydrothermally altered un-mineralized sandstone and sandstone-hosted ore in the Yaojia Formation have been performed through the use of scanning electron microscopy observation, electron probe, carbon-oxygen-sulfur isotope, and fluid inclusion analyses. The results show that the hydrothermal fluid derived from the intermediate-basic magma intrusion is a low-temperature reducing alkaline fluid and rich in CO2, Si, Zr, Ti, Fe, Mg, Mn, and Ca, producing different types of altered mineral assemblages in the rocks, including carbonation, pyritization, sphalerite mineralization, clausthalite mineralization, silicification, and biotitization. Specifically, the carbonate minerals in sandstone are mixed products of deep hydrothermal fluid and meteoric water, with carbon and oxygen isotopes ranging from −5.2‰ to −1.7‰ and −20.4‰ to −11.1‰, respectively. Carbon source of the carbonate minerals in dolerite is mainly inorganic carbon produced at the late stage of intermediate-basic magma evolution, with carbon and oxygen isotopes from −16.1‰ to −7.2‰ and −18.2‰ to −14.5‰, respectively. Various carbonate minerals in the rocks may have been precipitated by the hydrothermal fluid after the magmatic stage, due to the change of its CO2 fugacity, temperature, and cation concentration during the long-term evolution stage. A series of carbonate minerals were generated as calcite, dolomite, ankerite, ferromanganese dolomite, and dawsonite. The precipitation processes and different types of carbonate mineral mixtures identified in this study mainly occur as parallel, gradual transition, interlacing, or inclusion metasomatism in the same vein body, without obvious mineralogical and petrologic characteristics of penetrating relationship. Homogenization temperature of fluid inclusions in calcite is high, in the range of 203–234 °C, with a low salinity of 0.71–4.34% NaCl, and the data range is relatively concentrated. Homogenization temperature of fluid inclusions in ankerite is usually low, ranging from 100 °C to 232 °C, with a high salinity of 4.18–9.98% NaCl. The precipitation processes of carbonate minerals and the results of this study are basically in consistent. Overall, the sandstone-type uranium deposits have a temporal and genetic relationship with hydrothermal activities during Paleogene. (1) Hydrothermal activity was directly involved in uranium mineralization, result in dissolution and reprecipitation of earlier uranium minerals, forming uranium-bearing ankerite and complexes containing uranium, zirconium, silicon, and titanium. (2) Hydrothermal fluid activity provided reducing agent to promote hydrocarbon generation from pyrolysis of carbonaceous fragments and accelerate uranium precipitation rate. (3) Regional water stagnation prolongs reaction time, contributing to huge uranium enrichment. This study provides new petrologic, mineralogical, and geochemical evidence for multi-fluid coupled and superimposed mineralization of sandstone-hosted uranium deposits in the sedimentary basin.


2007 ◽  
Vol 102 (8) ◽  
pp. 1441-1470 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. G. Skirrow ◽  
E. N. Bastrakov ◽  
K. Barovich ◽  
G. L. Fraser ◽  
R. A. Creaser ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
E. Adlakha ◽  
K. Hattori

Basement rocks below the Athabasca Basin, Saskatchewan, have been intensely altered through paleoweathering and multiple hydrothermal events, including the formation of world-class unconformity-type uranium deposits. Here, we demonstrate the utility of Ti-oxide thermochronology for identifying thermotectonic events in these altered rocks leading to uranium mineralization along basement structures. Rutile grains along the P2 fault, a major fault in the eastern Athabasca Basin, exhibit 207Pb/206Pb ages of ca. 1850−1700 Ma, with a weighted mean of 1757 ± 6 Ma (mean square of weighted deviation [MSWD] = 1.4, n = 116). The older ages (>1770 Ma) record regional metamorphism reaching a temperature of 875 °C during the Trans-Hudson orogeny. Pb diffusion modeling indicates that metamorphic rutile should exhibit cooling ages of 1760−1750 Ma. Rutile grains showing young ages, <1750 Ma, reflect isotopic resetting during regional asthenospheric upwelling between 1770 and 1730 Ma related to the emplacement of the Kivalliq igneous suite to the north. This thermotectonic event (temperature > 550 °C) promoted hydrothermal activity to produce silicified rocks, i.e., “quartzite,” along the P2 fault, which later focused mineralizing fluids for unconformity-type uranium deposits. The young rutile ages also indicate that the basement rocks remained hot until 1700 Ma, providing the maximum age for the deposition of the Athabasca sediments. Anatase yields a concordia age of 1569 ± 31 Ma (MSWD = 0.30, n = 5), which is within uncertainty of the oldest ages for uraninite of the McArthur River deposit. This age corresponds to the incursion of basinal fluids in the basement along the P2 fault during uranium mineralization.


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