Geology of the Cargill phosphate deposit iri northern Ontario*

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
PETER O. SANDVIK
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
8
File Size:
8140 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1984

Abstract

The Cargill deposit, located 32 km south west of Kapuskasing, Ontario, was discovered by International Minerals and Chemical Corporation in 1975 and has been evaluated through an extensive program of drilling, chemical analyses, metallurgical tests and engineering and economic studies. The Cargill alkalic complex, comprising mainly carbonatite and pyroxenite-amphibolite rocks, was intruded into the rift system of the Kapuskasing magnetic-gravity high. Weathering and leaching under assumed temperate to cool climatic conditions plus faulting, shearing and/ or initial petrographic variations within the carbonatite developed a small, locally confined karst system. This resulted in a thick enriched leached carbonatite zone capped by troughs and sinks, and filled with a residuum of apatite, goethite, clay and other minerals. Residuum thickness ranges from nonexistent on ridges to 170 m in troughs and sinks. Apatite values are 5 to 15% in fresh carbonatite, 20 to 40% in leached carbonatite and 20 to 98% in residuum. A tentative open-pit mine designed for preliminary feasibility studies is estimated to contain 62.5 million tonnes averaging 19.6% P20 5.
Citation

APA: PETER O. SANDVIK  (1984)  Geology of the Cargill phosphate deposit iri northern Ontario*

MLA: PETER O. SANDVIK Geology of the Cargill phosphate deposit iri northern Ontario*. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1984.

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