Mineral Development in Northwest Queensland - The Challenge
 
    
    - Organization:
- The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 8
- File Size:
- 556 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1994
Abstract
Northern Australia leads in world-class mineral deposits' is a  bold statement. First there must be a starting point. Land north of  the Tropic of Capricorn (23¦ 26' 5") will be regarded as Northern  Australia covering nearly 40 per cent of the land surface of  Australia. As opposed to land south of the Tropic of Capricorn, it  should be regarded as Tropical Northern Australia and for the  sake of brevity, (TNA) Refer Figure 1. Apart from the tyranny of distance from centres of power and  population in the temperate zone, it suffered in the past from the  belief that the tropics are unsuited for European workers and from  the lack of infrastructure. Outstanding mineral deposits of iron, base metals, gold and  diamonds, discovered and developed in the past three decades,  provided the substance for the title. There are many world-class mines producing and there are  mineral deposits neutralised through Government policy. TNA  can maintain its lead in world-class mineral deposits provided  Government policy will stop partitioning the land and decreasing  that available for exploration. Let's look at what we have that is world-class. In Western  TNA iron ore deposits at Paraburdoo, Mt Tom Price, Marandoo,  gold at Telfer, diamonds at Argyle. In central TNA uranium at  Ranger and Jabiluka, lead-zinc-silver at McArthur River, gold at  the Tanami, manganese at Groote Eylandt and bauxite at Gove. In eastern TNA Mt Isa, Hilton, Century zinc-lead, bauxite at  Weipa, gold at Kidston, Mt Leyshon, magnesite at Yamba and  coal mines in the Bowen Basin. Those mines or deposits stand out yet are only an indication of  the numerous lesser mines and of mineral deposits depending for  development on market demand and/or changes in Government  policy, eg 'The Three Mines' policy. Very large areas of mineral rich structures in the western,  central and eastern parts of TNA are concealed below flat lying  comparatively young unmineralised sediments. The Great  Artisan basin sediments in eastern TNA can and do host oil shale  and non metallic minerals. Nearly 40 per cent of western TNA is covered by the Great  Sandy Desert. The Canning Track, with a series of 54 wells, was  constructed by surveyor Alfred Canning in 1908 - 1910 with  great difficulty. It extends 1700 kilometres from Halls Creek in  the north to the gold town of Wiluna in the south, through the  Great and Little Sandy Deserts. Gold explorers are following  favourable structures extending to the north east below the  sediments and sand hills covering the track. Half of central TNA's mineral structures are concealed by the  Tanami desert and the Cretaceous sediments covering the pastoral  regions of the Barkly Tableland and the Daly Waters to Top  Springs pastoral areas. The Georgina Basin in the south eastern  section is part of the concealment.
Citation
APA: (1994) Mineral Development in Northwest Queensland - The Challenge
MLA: Mineral Development in Northwest Queensland - The Challenge. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1994.
