Contrasting Styles Of Marine Diamond Mineralisation Requiring Different Mining Methodologies - A Case Study From Concession 2B South African West Coast

International Marine Minerals Society
P. C. Hollick
Organization:
International Marine Minerals Society
Pages:
3
File Size:
141 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1998

Abstract

Two marine diamond deposits on concession 2b off Namaqualand along the South African Coast, have been systematically mined over the past year by the mv Moonstar. The two deposits, Smith?s Ulcer and Wedge Point Basin, are comparable in morphology, straddled the same water depths and have similar geology yet have given very different recoveries when compared to their respective grade models. These differences are best ascribed to the different style of mineralisation observed within the two deposits which has been directly controlled by the bedrock morphology. The smith?s Ulcer deposit has been formed in a metagreywacke bedrock displaying a strong north-south trending foliation which dips steeply to the west. Consequently the mineralisation is confined to narrow north-south linear trends with limited lateral extent (less than 5m) making extraction extremely difficult and somewhat variable. RE factors (recovered grade versus estimated grade) for this deposit range from 0.5 to 1.1. The Wedge Point Basin deposit is formed in a micaceous metaquartzite with a conjugate southwest northwest joint set, the southwest lineation being the more prominent, and structural foliation dipping gently to the west. The resultant style of mineralisation is confined to basinal features defined by topographical lows and is fairly lateral in extent (in order of 50m). Extraction of the mineralisation from this deposit is less arduous with recoveries more uniform, RE factors are frequently in the range 2 - 3. This style of mineralisation is more in line with what is to be expected from marine alluvial deposits, the nugget effect of diamond concentration being responsible for the high RE factor. The long narrow linear trends observed in Smith?s Ulcer demonstrably require a specialised approach in successfully sampling, modeling and ultimately mining.
Citation

APA: P. C. Hollick  (1998)  Contrasting Styles Of Marine Diamond Mineralisation Requiring Different Mining Methodologies - A Case Study From Concession 2B South African West Coast

MLA: P. C. Hollick Contrasting Styles Of Marine Diamond Mineralisation Requiring Different Mining Methodologies - A Case Study From Concession 2B South African West Coast. International Marine Minerals Society, 1998.

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