scholarly journals Depositional Conditions of Cretaceous Ironstones Deposit in the Chulym-Yenisey Basin (Western Siberia)

Minerals ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (9) ◽  
pp. 1008
Author(s):  
Maxim Rudmin ◽  
Santanu Banerjee ◽  
Aigerim Dauletova ◽  
Aleksey Ruban

This study reconstructs the depositional conditions of ironstones within the Chulym-Yenisey basin and assesses the iron source. The detrital minerals of the studied deposits include quartz and feldspar. The authigenic minerals are goethite, siderite, aragonite, dolomite, calcite, apatite, barite, and pyrite. The clay components include minerals of the chlorite group (possible chamosite), nontronite, kaolinite, illite, and beidellite. Local bacterial sulfate reduction led to the formation of pyrite framboids in siltstone layers. The subsequent diagenetic iron reduction promoted the formation of chamosite from siderite. The goethite precipitation occurred in an oxidic aqueous environment. The Cretaceous continental sediments of the Ilek and Kia Formations of the Chulym-Yenisei depression consist of fine- and medium-grained, cross-stratified, poorly sorted litho-feldspatho-quartzose sandstones of fluvial channel origin alternating with bluish-gray siltstones and ironstones of floodplain–lacustrine–bog origin. Thin layers of iron-bearing rocks within siltstones formed in meromictic waters. The changes in geochemical proxies demonstrate fluctuations of paleoenvironmental conditions within the Cretaceous sequence. Siltstones and sandstones formed under humid and arid conditions, respectively. The primary iron source for sediments of the Chulym-Yenisey depression was determined as volcanogenic and igneous rocks of the Altai-Sayan mountainous region.

Minerals ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (12) ◽  
pp. 1078
Author(s):  
Nickolaj N. Rulyov ◽  
Lev O. Filippov ◽  
Dmytro Y. Sadovskyi ◽  
Vitalina V. Lukianova

Magnetite is an essential iron-bearing mineral. The primary method of magnetite ore beneficiation involves successive steps of crushing, grinding, and magnetic separation. Reverse cationic flotation is used at the final stage to remove silicate and aluminosilicate impurities from the magnetite concentrate and reduce silica content to 1–3%, depending on metallurgical processing route (electrometallurgy, direct iron reduction). In view of the stringent demands of the magnetite concentrate grade, before flotation, the ore is currently routinely ground down to a particle size below 35 µm, and magnetite particles are ground to a size below 10 µm. This significantly reduces the efficiency of flotation and increases iron loss in the tailings due to the hydraulic report in froth being up to 15–25%. Combined microflotation (CMF) looks to be a promising method of increasing fine-particle flotation efficiency, as it uses relatively small amounts of microbubbles alongside conventional coarse bubbles. Microbubbles act as flotation carriers, collecting gangue particles on their surface, which then coarse bubbles float. The purpose of this study is to explore the effectiveness of CMF for processing a model mixture that contained magnetite particles smaller than 10 µm and glass beads (Ballotini) below 37 µm in size when the initial iron content in the mixture was 63.76%. Commercial reagent Lilaflot 821M was used as both collector and frother. The flotation procedure, which included the introduction of 15 g/t of the collector before the start of flotation, and the addition of 5 g/t of the collector in combination with a microbubble dose of 0.018 m3/t 6 min after starting flotation, ensured an increase in the concentrate grade to 67.63% Fe and iron recovery of 91.16%.


2019 ◽  
Vol 486 (1) ◽  
pp. 53-56
Author(s):  
M. A. Rudmin ◽  
A. K. Mazurov ◽  
V. I. Sergienko ◽  
O. G. Savichev ◽  
I. P. Semiletov

This paper presents the results of interpreting the change in the magnetic signal of ferruginous marine sedimentary rocks using the example of the Cretaceous-Paleogene Bakchar deposit (Western Siberia). Anomalous magnetic susceptibility (MS) values are determined by two factors: (a) a diagenetic process accompanied by the formation of pyrrhotite, greigite and siderite in ironstones, (b) an increase detrital input with deposition of magnetite and ilmenite in the siltstones on the background of climate moistening and intense weathering. It is shown that increased MS values in iron-bearing marine sedimentary deposits can be associated with the formation of ferrimagnetic sulfides, which indicates to the methane emission through ancient marine bottom sediments.


1976 ◽  
Vol 120 ◽  
pp. 1-36
Author(s):  
N Hald

In central West Greenland flood basalts were erupted in the Early Tertiary. On Hareøen and western Nûgssuaq the upper part of the volcanic sequence predominates reaching a thickness of more than 3 km. In these two areas tholeiitic, olivine porphyritic basalts and picritic basalts are followed by tholeiitic basalts with plagioclase as the dominant phenocryst. The content of incompatible elements in the plagioclase porphyritic basalts is low in the early stages, as is the case in most of the older olivine porphyritic lavas in the province; however, after a pause in the volcanic activity, the concentration of these elements is increased by a factor of 3-6. A few thin layers of peralkaline, rhyolitic tuffs are found in the upper part of the plagioclase porphyritic sequence. The tholeiitic lavas are intruded by dykes. Most of these are petrographically the equivalent of the extrusive rocks, but dykes of transitional olivine basalts are presumed to represent a younger magmatic episode from which no lavas are known. The youngest igneous rocks in the area – and perhaps the youngest lavas in all of the West Greenland basalt province – are olivine porphyritic, alumina enriched transitional basalts deposited unconformably on the tholeiitic sequence on Hareøen. Forty-three new chemical analyses of the magmatic rocks are presented as well as micro-probe data on phenocryst and groundmass phases. The diversity of basaltic rocks cannot be explained by low pressure crystal fractionation alone, and it is suggested that the chemical evolution of the lavas and dyke rocks reflect chemical variations in batches of olivine rich magmas injected into the crust from the mantle.


2019 ◽  
Vol 2019 ◽  
pp. 1-10
Author(s):  
Lifang Hu ◽  
Yuyang Long ◽  
Chengran Fang

A high solid anaerobic incubation system was used to study the effect of dissimilatory iron reduction on the inhibition of methanogenesis in a landfill. Different iron sources including FeC6H5O7, Fe2(SO4)3, Fe2O3, and Fe0were studied. The different iron sources significantly affected the methanogenesis process in the simulated landfill system. FeC6H5O7and Fe2(SO4)3inhibited methanogenesis but Fe0and Fe2O3increased it. The dissimilatory iron reduction with FeC6H5O7as the iron source demonstrates an anaerobic mineralization process, which enhances the biodegradation but inhibits methanogenesis. The highest rate of reduction of CH4production (51.9%) was obtained at a dosage rate of 16,000 mg·kg−1, which corresponded to a reduction of 0.86 g of CH4per kg of organic matrix. Active inhibition by methanogens using both the hydrogenotrophic and acetoclastic pathways is considered to be the main mechanism underlying the reduction of CH4production by dissimilatory iron reduction with FeC6H5O7as the iron source. This is the first report on the effect of different iron forms on the reduction of CH4production during landfilling with organic solid waste.


2000 ◽  
Vol 23 (11-12) ◽  
pp. 1751-1765 ◽  
Author(s):  
A.D. Rombolà ◽  
W. Brüggemann ◽  
M. Tagliavini ◽  
B. Marangoni ◽  
P.R. Moog

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wilfried Bauer ◽  
Imboarina T. Rasaona ◽  
Robert D. Tucker ◽  
Forrest Horton

<p>The crystalline basement of central Madagascar is composed of the Neoarchaean, high-grade metamorphic Antananarivo Domain, made up of granulite to upper-amphibolite orthogneisses and paragneisses, and intruded by Tonian igneous rocks of the Imorona-Itsindro suite (Archibald et al. 2016). Along its southern, western and northern margins several terranes were accreted between the Paleoproterozoic and the Neoproterozoic (Tucker et al. 2014) before Madagascar was affected by the collision of East- and West-Gondwana at the end of the Ediacaran.</p><p>Within the Antananarivo Domain, a more than 700 km long and up to 80 km wide belt of supracrustal amphibolite-facies rocks forms te Ambatolampy Group. It is characterized by abundant monotonous biotite schists and gneisses that are locally migmatised. The schists contain biotite, sillimanite, garnet and locally thick graphite-rich layers. Associated paragneisses are also biotite-rich and commonly carry sillimanite or hornblende. White quartzites ranging from thick-bedded ridge-forming units to fine, cm-scale interbeds are coarse-grained and contain often sillimanite. Dark quartzites rich in magnetite and heavy minerals occur as cm-thin layers throughout the whole group. Small bodies of pyroxenite, pyroxene-amphibolite, amphibolite ±garnet, and pyroxene gneiss are common, especially close to the base of the group.</p><p>The age of the Ambatolampy Group is highly controversial. A group of researchers from BGS and USGS reported a youngest detrital zircon age of 1054 Ma, whereas Archibald et al. (2016) assumed a Mesoproterozoic age, based on their youngest zircons of roughly 1.8 Ga. We present new near-concordant U-Pb detrital zircons ages as young as 800 Ma, indicating a sedimentary input from igneous rocks of the Imorona-Itsindro suite. Sedimentation must have ceased before 630 Ma which is constrained by the U-Pb zircon age of an intruding leucogabbro.</p><p>About half of Madagascar’s known 1050 gold occurrences are lying within the Ambatolampy Group. Fine-grained disseminated gold appears to be concentrated within relatively narrow stratigraphic intervals of the Ambatolampy Group, defined by the occurrence of boudinaged or fractured magnetite quartzite. In general, the gold grades in fresh rocks are below economic interest, the highest gold tenors were recorded in an up to 30 meter thick laterite zone above the basement. Another important commodity related to the Ambatolampy Group is graphite which had seen a mining boom in the 1910s and 1920s. The graphite is flaky with crystal diameters between 0.5 and 5 mm and contents of graphitic carbon between 6 and 15 %. Individual seams are up to 12 m wide and can be tracked for several kilometers.</p><p>We interpret the Ambatolampy Group as a mainly siliciclastic fill of a continental rift basin during a phase of crustal extension occurring contemporaneously with the intrusion of the Imorona-Itsindro Suite. The gold mineralization is most likely related to fluvial deposits from surrounding gold-bearing Archean basement.</p><p> </p><p><strong>References</strong></p><p>Archibald, D.B. et al. 2015. Tectonophysics 662, pp. 167-182.</p><p>Archibald, D.B. et al. 2016. Precambr. Res. 281, pp. 312–337.</p><p>Tucker, R.D. et al. 2014. J. African Earth Sci. 94, pp. 9-30.</p>


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