Assaying wollastonite in skarn

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Gregory M. Dipple Mati Raudsepp Terence M. Gordon
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
10
File Size:
4030 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2001

Abstract

Four methods of measuring mineral abundance in a rock are examined for their potential in assaying for high-tech industrial minerals. One method uses X-ray powder-diffraction data and the other three rely on whole rock chemical data and information on mineral assemblages and mineral compositions. All four methods were employed to estimate wollastonite content in diamond drill core of skarn collected as part of an exploration program and are compared to visual estimates of wollastonite content from core logs. These techniques for assaying wollastonite span a considerable range ofaccuracy and expense, and combined, define a non-linear relationship between these variables. Accuracy increases rapidly relative lo expense up to total costs of about $50 per analysis. Assay methods in the $50-100 per analysis range have associated errors of 5-10% relative and probably suffice for most exploration programs. Improvements in accuracy above this level require a much larger investment. The most expensive assay technique (-$300 per analysis) yields the most accurate measurement of grade (relative error -1%). Its application may best be limited to periodic checks on other assay techniques and for fine-tuning ofmineral separation procedures.
Citation

APA: Gregory M. Dipple Mati Raudsepp Terence M. Gordon  (2001)  Assaying wollastonite in skarn

MLA: Gregory M. Dipple Mati Raudsepp Terence M. Gordon Assaying wollastonite in skarn. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 2001.

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