Mineralogy And Geochemistry of Heavy Mineral Beach-Placer Sandstones in New Mexico - SME Annual Meeting 2024

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Evan J. Owen Virginia T. McLemore
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
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8
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1890 KB
Publication Date:
Feb 1, 2024

Abstract

of high specific gravity, resistant minerals that form from mechanical concentration by waves, currents, and winds in marginal-marine environments. These sediments are enriched in critical minerals such as titanium, zirconium, and REE. Cretaceous beach-placer sandstones are found in the Colorado Plateau of northwestern New Mexico. Originally discovered by airborne radiometric surveys for uranium in the 1950s, these beach-placer sandstones are being re-examined with modern methods as potential sources for critical minerals. Selected beach-placer sandstones have been sampled, mapped with ground radiometric surveys, and analyzed with whole-rock and trace element geochemical methods. Mineralogy is being determined with optical methods, XRD, and EMPA. Zircon, rutile, ilmenite, and monazite are the primary heavy minerals of interest found in the studied deposits. Initial results show that the sandstones contain up to 1.4% total REE, 29.4% TiO2, and an estimated 4.9% ZrO2. Chondrite-normalized REE diagrams show distinct light REE and minor heavy REE enrichment, as well as pronounced negative Eu anomalies for each deposit.
Citation

APA: Evan J. Owen Virginia T. McLemore  (2024)  Mineralogy And Geochemistry of Heavy Mineral Beach-Placer Sandstones in New Mexico - SME Annual Meeting 2024

MLA: Evan J. Owen Virginia T. McLemore Mineralogy And Geochemistry of Heavy Mineral Beach-Placer Sandstones in New Mexico - SME Annual Meeting 2024. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 2024.

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