Mineralogy and Geology of the Serpentinite Associated Hitura Ni-Cu Deposit, Finland: Implications for Benefication
    
    - Organization:
 - The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
 - Pages:
 - 11
 - File Size:
 - 1311 KB
 - Publication Date:
 - Jan 1, 1996
 
Abstract
The Paleoproterozoic Hitura Ni-Cu deposit in western Finland is in an  ultramafic igneous complex composed of two subvertical plug-shaped  bodies embedded in intensely migmatised felsic gneisses. The ultramafic  complex is not far from a north-south trending graphitic and sulphidic  gneiss zone interpreted to be a primary sulphide-graphite unit in the  metasedimentary sequence. The sulphide accumulation exists as a zone  parallel to the contact of the northern ultramafic body. The ultramafic rock types, now mainly serpentinites, have primarily  been olivine adcumulates in the core grading to olivine orthocumulates  and pyroxenites towards the margins. Coarse-grained felsic pegmatite  veins injected serpentinite where they now exhibit prominent zoned  alteration rims of chlorite, antophyllite and talc. The serpentinite core of  the body was primarily an olivine adcumulate derived from a tholeiitic or  high-Mg basalt parental magma with about 11 wt % MgO.  Metamorphism and alteration have totally changed the igneous mineral  compositions and the rock types are serpentinites (from olivine  adcumulates), ambhibole-bearing serpentinites and amphibole-chlorite  rocks (from pyroxenites). As the result of CO2 alteration talc is an  accessory mineral throughout the serpentinite. Like silicates, also  sulphide minerals are altered. In the core of the body the low-grade  sulphide dissemination still reveals primary igneous interstitial forms. The  core sulphides are now mackinawite, pentlandite and valleriite instead of  primary igneous pyrrhotite and pentlandite derived from Mss. At the  marginal zone the heavy dissemination and net-textured sulphides display  pyrrhotite-pentlandite-magnetite intergrowths with magnetite films along  cleavage of sulphides, mackinawite in pentlandite and exsolution textures  of different low-temperature pyrrhotite phases as the result of alteration  processes. Mechanically weak rocks, complicated structures and textures of the  ore, magnetite and mackinawite intergrowths in pentlandite and  readily-floating MgO silicates cause problems in exploitation of the  deposit. Solution to problems come from selective stoping, three-step  classification in grinding, froth-washing technique and on-line process  control based on ore type determination from process data using an expert  System
Citation
APA: (1996) Mineralogy and Geology of the Serpentinite Associated Hitura Ni-Cu Deposit, Finland: Implications for Benefication
MLA: Mineralogy and Geology of the Serpentinite Associated Hitura Ni-Cu Deposit, Finland: Implications for Benefication. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1996.