Constituent rocks and radioactive values of the Chungju-Goesan area in the northwestern part Ogcheon metamorphic zone, Korea: Considering on the source rock of REE ore body and its distribution and characteristics

2018 ◽  
Vol 54 (4) ◽  
pp. 383-398
Author(s):  
Ji-Hoon Kang ◽  
Deok-Seon Lee ◽  
Sang-Mo Koh
2000 ◽  
Vol 40 (1) ◽  
pp. 257 ◽  
Author(s):  
J.C. Preston ◽  
D.S. Edwards

Geochemical data from oils and source rock extracts have been used to delineate the active petroleum systems of the Northern Bonaparte Basin. The study area comprises the northeastern portion of the Territory of Ashmore and Cartier Islands, and the western part of the Zone of Co-operation Area A, and is specifically concerned with the wells located on and between the Laminaria and Flamingo highs. The oils and condensates from this region can be divided into two distinct chemical groups which correspond with the reservoir types, namely, a smaller group recovered from fracture porosity within the Early Cretaceous Darwin Formation, and a larger group reservoired in sandstones of the Middle-to-Late Jurassic Plover and Elang formations. The oils recovered from the Darwin Formation have a marine source affinity and correlate with sediment extracts from the underlying Early Cretaceous Echuca Shoals Formation. The Elang/ Plover-reservoired oils, which include all the commercial accumulations, were divided into two end-member families; the first includes the relatively land-plant- influenced oils from the northwestern part of the area (e.g. Laminaria, Corallina, Buffalo and Jahal fields), the second includes the relatively marine-influenced oils to the southeast (e.g. Bayu-Undan fields). Another oil family comprises the geographically and geochemically intermediate oils of the Elang and Kakatua fields and adjacent areas. While none of the oils can be uniquely correlated with a single source unit, they show geochemical similarities with Middle-to-Late Jurassic source rock extracts. Organic-rich rocks within the Plover and Elang formations are the major source of hydrocarbons for this area. The range in geochemistry of the Elang/Plover-reservoired oils may arise from facies variation within these sediments, but is more probably due to the localised additional input of hydrocarbons generated from thermally mature organic-rich claystone seals that overlie the Elang reservoir in catchment areas and traps; i.e. from the Frigate Formation for the northwestern oil family and from the Flamingo Group for the southeastern oil family. The short-range migration patterns dictated by the structural complexity of the basin are reflected in the closeness with which variations in the geochemical character of the accumulated liquids track variations in the character of source-seal lithologies. The length of migration pathways can, therefore, be inferred from the similarity or otherwise of source-seal characters with those of the hydrocarbon accumulations themselves. The resulting observations may challenge existing ideas concerning migration patterns, hydrocarbon prospectivity and prospect risking within the Northern Bonaparte Basin.


2012 ◽  
Vol 91 (4) ◽  
pp. 535-554 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Abdul Fattah ◽  
J.M. Verweij ◽  
N. Witmans ◽  
J.H. ten Veen

Abstract3D basin modelling is used to investigate the history of maturation and hydrocarbon generation on the main platforms in the northwestern part of the offshore area of the Netherlands. The study area covers the Cleaverbank and Elbow Spit Platforms. Recently compiled maps and data are used to build the input geological model. An updated and refined palaeo water depth curve and newly refined sediment water interface temperatures (SWIT) are used in the simulation. Basal heat flow is calculated using tectonic models. Two main source rock intervals are defined in the model, Westphalian coal seams and pre-Westphalian shales, which include Namurian and Dinantian successions. The modelling shows that the pre-Westphalian source rocks entered the hydrocarbon generation window in the Late Carboniferous. In the southern and central parts of the study area, the Namurian started producing gas in the Permian. In the north, the Dinantian source rocks appear to be immature. Lower Westphalian sediments started generating gas during the Upper Triassic. Gas generation from Westphalian coal seams increased during the Paleogene and continues in present-day. This late generation of gas from Westphalian coal seams is a likely source for gas accumulations in the area.Westphalian coals might have produced early nitrogen prior to or during the main gas generation occurrence in the Paleogene. Namurian shales may be a source of late nitrogen after reaching maximum gas generating phase in the Triassic. Temperatures reached during the Mid Jurassic were sufficiently high to allow the release of non-organic nitrogen from Namurian shales.


Author(s):  
Franz Weis ◽  
Valentin R. Troll ◽  
Erik Jonsson ◽  
Karin Högdahl ◽  
Chris Harris ◽  
...  

AbstractThe origin of Kiruna-type iron oxide–apatite ores is controversial, and debate presently centres on a ‘magmatic’ versus a ‘hydrothermal’ mode of formation. To complement recent investigations on the Grängesberg iron oxide–apatite ore deposit in the northwestern part of the Palaeoproterozoic Bergslagen ore province in central Sweden, we investigated the oxygen isotope composition of the host rocks of this large iron oxide–apatite ore body. As the metavolcanic and metagranitoid country rocks around the Grängesberg ore body either pre-date or are coeval with ore formation, they would be expected to record an extensive isotopic imprint if the ore body had formed by large-scale hydrothermal processes involving an externally sourced fluid. A direct magmatic formation process, in turn, would have produced localized alteration only, concentrated on the immediate vicinity of the ore body. Here, we test these two hypotheses by assessing the oxygen isotope variations in the host rocks around the main Grängesberg iron oxide–apatite ore body. We analysed oxygen isotopes in quartz from metavolcanic (n = 17) and metagranitoid host rocks (n = 14) from the vicinity of the ore body, and up to 2 km distance along and across the strike of the ore body. Remarkably, we find no significant variation in δ18O values with distance from the ore body, or any deviations in country rock δ18O from common magmatic and/or regional values. Only two samples show shifts to values more negative than the common magmatic range, indicating highly localized hydrothermal overprint only. As a large-scale, low-temperature hydrothermal origin of the ore body through voluminous fluid percolation would be expected to have left a distinct imprint on the oxygen isotope values of the country rocks, our results are more consistent with an ortho-magmatic origin for the Grängesberg iron oxide–apatite ore.


1993 ◽  
Vol 30 (9) ◽  
pp. 1934-1954 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. J. Barrett ◽  
W. H. MacLean ◽  
S. Cattalani ◽  
L. Hoy

The Corbet deposit is located in the upper part of the Flavrian andesite, the lowest volcanic formation within cycle III of the Noranda Central Mine Sequence. The deposit consisted of one main lens of massive sulfides, and several smaller lenses, and contained 2.7 × 106 t of mineable ore at 2.92% Cu, 1.98% Zn, 20.6 g/t Ag, and 1.0 g/t Au. The orebody had a massive pyrrhotite–chalcopyrite core, which passed laterally into massive pyrite–sphalerite. The northwestern part of the ore-body is overlain by 50–100 m of Flavrian andesite, whereas the southeastern portion is overlain by Northwest rhyolite.Lavas within the Flavrian andesite and the lower Northwest rhyolite are low in K2O (<0.5%), and are partly of tholeiitic affinity, and partly of transitional affinity. The tholeiitic volcanic series has Zr/Y ratios of 2.8 to 4.5, whereas the transitional series has Zr/Y ratios of 4.5 to 7.1. The two series are also distinct in plots of Nb–Zr, Yb–Zr, Nb–Y, and the rare earth elements. These data indicate that two slightly different magma types existed in the chamber that fed this portion of the extrusive Central Mine Sequence.Alteration is most intense in the breccias of the upper Flavrian andesite, within ~50 m of the orebody, and is almost entirely chloritic. There is no zone of silicification, although moderate sericitization occurs lateral to and above the orebody. Mass-change calculations indicate that large amounts of SiO2 and CaO + Na2O were leached from the rocks by hydrothermal solutions, whereas large amounts of hydrothermal FeO and seawater MgO were added.Oxygen isotope depletions are among the largest in the Noranda area and extend laterally and vertically up to 300 m from the orebody. Within this volume, δ18O values of altered volcanic rocks have been decreased to values as low as 2 to −2‰. These depletions result from reactions with seawater at ~ 250–300 °C and from strong silica leaching, as indicated by mass-change calculations. The hydrothermal system at Corbet can be assessed using two lithogeochemical tools: calculated mass changes and oxygen isotope ratios, both of which are sensitive to water–rock ratio and temperature.


Author(s):  
Thomas R. McKee ◽  
Peter R. Buseck

Sediments commonly contain organic material which appears as refractory carbonaceous material in metamorphosed sedimentary rocks. Grew and others have shown that relative carbon content, crystallite size, X-ray crystallinity and development of well-ordered graphite crystal structure of the carbonaceous material increases with increasing metamorphic grade. The graphitization process is irreversible and appears to be continous from the amorphous to the completely graphitized stage. The most dramatic chemical and crystallographic changes take place within the chlorite metamorphic zone.The detailed X-ray investigation of crystallite size and crystalline ordering is complex and can best be investigated by other means such as high resolution transmission electron microscopy (HRTEM). The natural graphitization series is similar to that for heat-treated commercial carbon blacks, which have been successfully studied by HRTEM (Ban and others).


2019 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
pp. 14-20
Author(s):  
A.Yu. Cheban ◽  
◽  
G.A. Kursakin ◽  
S.I. Korneeva ◽  
A.A. Fatkulin ◽  
...  
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