Rectorite: A New Phyllosilicate Species in Witwatersrand Palaeoplacers. Its Genesis and Implications for the Gold-Mining Industry

- Organization:
- The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
- Pages:
- 10
- File Size:
- 425 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1991
Abstract
Systematic quantitative X-ray diffraction analyses performed on diamond-drill cores originating from the Aandenk formation at the Loraine Gold Mine, located in the Welkom goldfield, Orange Free State, South Africa, have revealed the presence of a number of phyllosilicate mineral assemblages which have not hitherto been reported from this region. Rectorite, a regularly interstratified 1:1 mica-montmorillonite "swelling clay", is found to occur together with paragonite, muscovite, pyrophyllite, kaolinite, and chlorite in highly-altered friable rocks. The presence of rectorite in mill feeds may have potentially serious implications with respect to gold recovery. Quantitative X-ray diffraction analysis for phyllosilicates can be used as an aid to correlation, and also to guide the widths of stopes in underground mining. Rectorite has a unique mode of origin, which is discussed.
Citation
APA:
(1991) Rectorite: A New Phyllosilicate Species in Witwatersrand Palaeoplacers. Its Genesis and Implications for the Gold-Mining IndustryMLA: Rectorite: A New Phyllosilicate Species in Witwatersrand Palaeoplacers. Its Genesis and Implications for the Gold-Mining Industry. The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society, 1991.