scholarly journals High-grade Uranium Ore Body Newly Discovered at Ningyô-tôgé

Author(s):  
Fumio TOGO ◽  
Hiroshi TAKASE
Keyword(s):  
2021 ◽  
Vol 59 (5) ◽  
pp. 913-945
Author(s):  
Steve R. Beyer ◽  
Kurt Kyser ◽  
Tom G. Kotzer ◽  
Kevin Ansdell ◽  
David Quirt

ABSTRACT An orientation survey using surficial media was performed over the high-grade McArthur River unconformity-related U deposit (Saskatchewan, Canada) to test whether or not secondary dispersion of elements related to the ore body or alteration zone can be detected at the surface more than 500 m above the deposit. Organic-rich Ah-horizon soils, Fe-rich B-horizon soils, C-horizon soils, tree cores of Jack pine (Pinus banksiana), and glacially dispersed boulders of Manitou Falls Formation sandstone that host the U deposit were collected in four sampling grids near the mine site. Two of the grids overlaid the trace of the P2 fault that hosts the deposit and extends nearly to the surface, one grid overlaid both the P2 fault and one of the high-grade ore bodies (Zone 4), and one grid was located 2.5 km away from the ore body surface trace in the barren hanging wall of the P2 fault. The grid overlying the Zone 4 ore body had the highest proportion of samples with elevated U and low 207Pb/206Pb ratios, the latter indicative of radiogenic Pb from a high-U source, measured in two size fractions of Ah-horizon soils using Na pyrophosphate leach, pine tree cores using total digestion, and sandstone boulders using 2% HNO3 leach. A handful of pathfinder elements, such as As, Co, Ni, and Pb, are variably associated with the U and radiogenic Pb. Sandstone boulders with an assemblage of dravite + kaolinite ± illite, determined using shortwave infrared (SWIR) spectroscopy and matching the alteration mineralogy in the Manitou Falls Formation above the U deposit, were prevalent in the grid above the Zone 4 ore body and in the adjacent grid in the direction of glacial dispersion. A coarse fraction of the B-horizon soils, leached with 5% HNO3, highlighted the grid above the Zone 4 ore body to a lesser extent, whereas HNO3 leaches and aqua regia digests of C-horizon soil separates did not highlight the P2 fault or ore body trace due to influence by parent till mineralogy. Results of environmental monitoring at the mine site, which was active at the time of sampling, suggest that dust containing U, Pb, and radionuclides from waste rock piles and a ventilation shaft could influence A-horizon soil geochemistry near the mine site, and that U and radiogenic Pb anomalies in B- and C-horizon soils near the water table are close to a treated mine effluent discharge point. However, older trees that record elevated U and radiogenic Pb in annual rings that pre-date mining activity, and alteration mineralogy and geochemistry of boulders that are less susceptible to the influences of mining activity, add confidence that the geochemical anomaly in diverse surficial media above the Zone 4 ore body represents secondary dispersion from the underlying U deposit.


1999 ◽  
Vol 160 (3) ◽  
pp. 225-240 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hans R von Gunten ◽  
Elfriede Roessler ◽  
Richard T Lowson ◽  
Peter D Reid ◽  
Stephen A Short

Geophysics ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 77 (4) ◽  
pp. D159-D169 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. Dickson ◽  
M. Craig

Uranium exploration and mining make widespread use of gamma-ray logs to determine ore-grade distribution in situ. Attenuation, scattering, and uncollimated detectors all degrade the signal, hampering accuracy. We deconvolve their effects from the measured logs by space-domain processing with the aid of a function that takes account of detector length and uranium ore-zone thickness. The output quantifies uranium grade by zones of specified location and thickness. With this method, thin zones of very high grade can be used for calibration. Illustrative data come from model pits in Australia, Canada, and the USA.


Geophysics ◽  
1978 ◽  
Vol 43 (3) ◽  
pp. 543-549 ◽  
Author(s):  
Leif Løvborg ◽  
Lars Bøtter‐Jensen ◽  
Peter Kirkegaard

Four radioactive concrete pads, 3 m in diameter and 0.5 m thick, were constructed to serve as sources of potassium, uranium, and thorium gamma radiation in calibration experiments with portable spectrometers and total‐count scintillometers. One of the pads contains an admixture of high‐grade uranium ore. The radiation output from this pad fluctuates and has a seasonal variation of ±20 percent. This observation indicates that the uranium ore emanates radon into the concrete pores, and that this radon is subject to the same pumping action from the atmosphere as radon in soil. In dry and warm weather the concrete surface has a low content of gamma‐ray emitting radon daughters, because radon is lost from the pad. This situation is reversed when the weather is cold and moist. Therefore a varying, apparent radiometric concentration of uranium must be ascribed to the pad. The apparent uranium concentration correlates the observed radiation output with the stable radiation output produced by the three other pads, and it can at any time be determined from four readings with a total‐count scintillometer operated at an energy threshold of 0.4 MeV.


1982 ◽  
Vol 22 (01) ◽  
pp. 132-140 ◽  
Author(s):  
R.S. Schechter ◽  
Paul M. Bommer

Abstract The results of the first restoration effort for a pilot-scale acidic leaching of a uranium ore body in the U.S. are given. The project was performed under a cooperative agreement between the USBM and a joint venture consisting of Rocky Mountain Energy, Mono Power Co., and Halliburton Co. The leaching phase is described only briefly; it was reported earlier by Tweeton et al. Leaching was done with H2SO4 (pH range of 1.6 to 3.9) and H2O2 (80 to 1,000 ppm) over an 11-month period. The restoration phase begun in September 1978 and was completed in 11 months. Water samples were taken from observation wells located between injection and production wells while the leaching solution was decreased in strength. Groundwater quality in the leached ore zone was restored by diluting and neutralizing effects of injecting native groun dwater and treated water produced from recovered solution. Recovered water was purified by a combination of chemical precipitation and reverse osmosis. In-situ measurements of pH, Eh, dissolved oxygen, conductivity, and temperature were made by a downhole probe in one of the wells. Water samples were taken and analyzed for U. V, Na, K, Ca, Mg, SO4, P, Cl, F, Fe, Mn, Si, Zn, As, and Se. Introduction The USBM and the companies listed previously entered into a cooperative agreement aimed at modeling in situ leaching (ISL) of uranium with sulfuric acid at the venture's Nine-Mile Lake test site near Casper. WY (Fig. 1). Acid leaching of uraniferous ores is relatively unproved because most earlier ISL systems involved use of alkaline leachants. This report describes the first restoration of a pilot-scale acidic-leached ore body inthe U.S. The results of an 11-month leaching phase conducted on afive-spot pilot test area (Pattern 2, Fig. 2) were previously reported bythe Bureau of Mines. The study presented here consisted of weekly in-situ determination of water quality parameters within the ore zone being restored plus additional water analysis in the laboratory. Geology The uranium mineralization occurs in Teapot sandstone members of the Upper Creataceous Mesaverde formation. The project site is located approximately 15 km (9 miles) north of Casper in Natrona County. The leached uranium ore (and aquifer) restored to baseline in this study was a bedded deposit ranging from 155 to 165 m (508 to 541 ft) deep. The sandstone contains quartz, feldspar, and minor amounts of mica, black (organic-containing) minerals, glauconite, carbon aceous fragments, blue to earthy clayinclusions, and disseminated argillaceous materials. The deposit isamenable to acidic leaching because of the relatively low carbonate content. The mineralization is typical of a roll-front type deposit. The principal uranium mineral is uraninite (UO2), with minor amounts of coffinite U(SiO4) 1-X (OH) 4X. Further de tails are found in the operators environmental report to the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC). Hydrology The Teapot sand stone is an artesian aquifer confined by the overlying Lewisshale and the underlying Pumpkin Buttes shale. The formation dips to theeast-northeast at about 7 with ground water movement in that direction at about 4 m/a (14 ft/yr). The aquifer is recharged at the out crop approximately 3 km (2 miles) west of the test area. Groun dwater in the project area is marginally acceptable for live stock watering or industrial use. SPEJ P. 382^


Geophysics ◽  
1965 ◽  
Vol 30 (3) ◽  
pp. 396-402
Author(s):  
P. Edward Byerly

Data obtained from temperature surveys in drill holes over two uranium ore bodies are presented as maps of isotherms at depths of 100 ft or more. Temperature surveys in permeable ore bodies above the water table may reveal zones of downward migration of oxygenated water, or zones with a comparatively large retention of pore water. These zones may be associated with an increased amount of oxidation in an ore body which is not completely oxidized.


2019 ◽  
Vol 28 (4) ◽  
pp. 706-716
Author(s):  
Mykhailo V. Petlovanyi ◽  
Vladislav V. Ruskykh

This paper is dedicated to research into the geological peculiarities, shape of the ore body and the occurrence of the host rocks in the hanging wall of the Pivdenno-Biloz- erske deposit , as well as their influence on the degrees and quality of high-grade iron ore extraction. It is noted that in the interval of 480 – 840 m depths, a decrease is observed in the stability of the natural and technogenic massif, which is caused by the increase in rock pressure with depth, the influence of blast- ing operations on the massif and the difference in geological conditions. This has led to the collapse of hanging wall rocks and backfill into the mined-out space of chambers in certain areas of the deposit, the dilution of the ore and deterioration of the operational state of the underground mine workings. Attention is focused on the causes and peculiarities of consequences of the collapse of the hanging wall rocks during ore mining, which reduce the technical and-economic indexes of the ore extraction from the chambers. A 3D-model of an ore deposit with complex structural framework has been developed, which makes it possible to visually observe in axonometric projection the geological peculiarities and the shape of the ore body. The parameters have been studied of mining chambers in the 640 – 740 m floor under different changing geological conditions of the ore deposit and hanging wall rocks occurrence – the northern, central and southern parts. The difference in the iron content in the mined ore relative to the initial iron content in the massif has been defined as an indicative criterion of the influence of changing conditions on the production quality. The reasons have been revealed which contribute to the collapse of the rocks and the subsequent decrease in the iron content of the mined ore in ore deposit areas dif- fering by their characteristics. It has been determined that within the central and half of the southern ore deposit parts with a length of 600 m, an anomalous geological zone is formed, the manifestation of which will be increased with the depth of mining. It was noted that within this zone, with the highest intensity and density of collapse of hanging wall rocks, the influence of decrease in the slope angle and change in the strike direction are of greatest priority, and such geological factors as a decrease in hardness, rock morphology, deposit thickness increase this influence significantly. To solve the problems of the hanging wall rocks’ stability, it is recommended to study the nature and direction of action of gravity forces on the stope chambers in the northern, central and southern parts, as well to search for scientific solutions in regard to changes in the geometric shapes of stope chambers and their spatial location, improving the order of reserves mining in terms of the ore deposit area, the rational order of breaking-out ore reserves in the chambers with changing mining and geological conditions of the fields’ development.


2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (23) ◽  
pp. 8369
Author(s):  
Kun Song ◽  
Ende Wang ◽  
Yuzeng Yao ◽  
Jianfei Fu ◽  
Dahai Hao ◽  
...  

Research on wall rock alteration is of great importance to the understanding and exploration of ore deposits. The microscopic changes of the same mineral in different alteration zones can provide information about the migration and enrichment of ore-forming elements. In this paper, a typical profile of a high-grade iron ore body in Gongchangling iron deposit was investigated and sampled. The samples were checked by polarized microscopy, and alterations zonation were delineated according to the hydrothermal mineral assemblages and paragenesis. Moreover, hyperspectral images of wall rocks from each alteration zone were obtained by Norsk Elektro Optikk (NEO) HySpex-320 m imaging system. A customer Interactive Data Language (IDL) software package was used to process the images, and spectral features were extracted from the selected samples. The results indicate that spectral characteristics manifest obviously regular variations; i.e., from proximal to distal for the high-grade iron ore body, the wavelengths at ca. 1200 nm of chlorite and garnet, which accounts for most of the hydrothermal alteration minerals, become longer, and the absorption depths gradually smaller. The spectral features at 1200 nm of chlorite and garnet are always caused by the crystal field effect of Fe2+; therefore, the wavelength variations indicate the increase of Fe2+ and a reduced environment, which can provide more detailed information about the metallogeny and water–rock interaction. Since the hyperspectral features of the altered rocks can disclose unique mineralogical and structural information, the conventional classification of alteration zonation should be combined with the spectral feature, i.e., spectral alteration zonation, which is of great help to the understanding of the forming conditions of wall rock alteration and also the high-grade iron ore bodies.


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