The geology of the Cenex uranium deposit Beaverlodge, Saskatchewan

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Delio J-J Tortosa Fred F. Langford
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
10
File Size:
1773 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1986

Abstract

"The Cenex orebody occurs at the intersection of northwest and northeast-trending fault zones that formed during post-Hudsonian uplift. The ore is localized in breccia zones, along faults, and in veins and adjacent wallrocks. The host rocks are Tazin quartzo-fe/dspathic mylonites and ultramylonites and chloritesericite- quartz-graphite-feldspar mylonite schist. The uraniumbearing minerals are finely disseminated pitchblende and uraniferous titanate.The earliest mineralization may have been associated with /ate-stage retrograde metamorphism in the mylonite schist. The main stages of mineralization were associated with brecciation, hematization, carbonatization, and chloritization of the mylonites and ultramylonites. Uranium mineralization was clearly much later than any igneous or metamorphic activity associated with the Hudsonian orogeny.Late post-orogenic uplift, erosion, and deposition of the Martin continental clastics in fault basins were coeval with uranium mineralization. The deposit is consistent with a meteoric-hydrologic system constituting a source for orebearing fluids, hence the close spatial relationship of the uranium deposits in the Beaverlodge area with the basal unconformity of the Martin Group."
Citation

APA: Delio J-J Tortosa Fred F. Langford  (1986)  The geology of the Cenex uranium deposit Beaverlodge, Saskatchewan

MLA: Delio J-J Tortosa Fred F. Langford The geology of the Cenex uranium deposit Beaverlodge, Saskatchewan. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1986.

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