Platinum-Group-Metals, Gold, And Chromium Resource Potential Offshore Of Platinum, Alaska

- Organization:
- International Marine Minerals Society
- Pages:
- 2
- File Size:
- 68 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1986
Abstract
Concern over the availability of domestic critical and strategic mineral supplies has led the Bureau of Mines to evaluate the reserve development potential of alternative sources in Alaska. Near the village of Platinum, on the southwest Alaska coast, the Red Mountain concentrically zoned ultramafic complex is a source of onshore alluvial placers containing platinum-group-metals (PGM). It has long been suggested that valuable placers may also underlie the shallow coastal waters of the Bering Sea. A direct correlation of placer PGM and chromium to ultramafic rocks in the area was studied by the Bureau and the extent of the complex was mapped. Magnetometer and gravity data and geological studies suggest the complex is a large lensoidal body trending several kilometers offshore to the southwest with a probable steep southeasterly dip. Multiple Pleistocene glaciations and marine transgressions have eroded the western and southwestern portion of the complex. Sediments containing PGM, chromium, and associated gold (largely derived from glacial till) have been transported northward along the advancing coastline by littoral currents. Beyond the breaker zone, these sediments are generally buried by recently winnowed sand and gravel transported by strong longshore tidal currents. There is also evidence that paleoplacer channels underlie the marine sediments.
Citation
APA:
(1986) Platinum-Group-Metals, Gold, And Chromium Resource Potential Offshore Of Platinum, AlaskaMLA: Platinum-Group-Metals, Gold, And Chromium Resource Potential Offshore Of Platinum, Alaska. International Marine Minerals Society, 1986.