A Review of Recent Studies in the Pine Creek Geosyncline with Special Reference to Uranium

The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Organization:
The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Pages:
17
File Size:
733 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1979

Abstract

The Lower Proterozoic metasediments of the Pine Creek Geosyncline form a chrono- stratigraphic sequence of mainly greenschist- and amphibolite-grade shallow-marine to supratidal pelites, psammites, carbonate rocks, and volcaniclastics which in places rests unconformably on Archaean basement. Granite and later dolerite intrude the sequence, and are associated with the major orogenic 1800-m.y. event which regionally metamorphosed the sediments. Most mineralisation is stratabound, and can be related at least partly to volcanic activity. Uranium mineralisation is mainly confined to particular carbonate-rich horizons near basement. Other metals are mainly in small hydrothermal deposits near intrusive granite. Specialist studies indicate that uranium was leached from its source rock, and probably carried as carbonate complexes in highly saline fluids at between 100 and 3500 C. Precipitation took place by redox reactions in breccia zones in carbonate rocks; these zones were formed by carbonate solution or diapiric movement of evaporites which preceded the carbonate. Extensive chloritisation in the ore zones suggests metasomatism by Fe- and Mg-rich fluids which may have evolved during dewatering of the evaporites. The main mineralising event took place after the 1800 m.y. metamorphism, and was probably
Citation

APA:  (1979)  A Review of Recent Studies in the Pine Creek Geosyncline with Special Reference to Uranium

MLA: A Review of Recent Studies in the Pine Creek Geosyncline with Special Reference to Uranium. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1979.

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