Ferriferous and vanadiferous kaolinites from the hydrothermal alteration halo of the Cigar Lake uranium deposit (Canada)
AbstractThe uranium deposit (1350 Ma) of Cigar Lake (Canada) is surrounded by a late hydrothermal alteration halo (330 Ma) containing Fe-illites and kaolinites. Crystallochemical characterization of the kaolinites has been carried on the microscale using XRD, electron microscopy (SEM and TEM) coupled with EDX spectrometry and EPR. The large, well-crystallized particles show large amounts of Fe (0.9–1.8%) and V (0.3–0.5%). According to EPR measurements performed on both random powders and oriented samples, V occurs as the vanadyl ion VO2+, in substitution within the octahedral sheet of the kaolinite structure in the same way as Fe3+. Kaolinite growth proceeded through the hydrothermal alteration of anterior phyllosilicates devoid of V, induced by fluids which leached V-rich titano-magnetites in the surrounding sandstones.