J. Powell, J. Percival, E. Potter, R. van der Lelij, R. Xie
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引用次数: 1
Abstract
The Patterson Lake corridor (PLC) along the southwestern margin of the Athabasca Basin contains high-grade uranium deposits entirely within crystalline basement rocks. Visible-near infrared - shortwave infrared (VNIR-SWIR) spectroscopy measurements were collected on drill core samples from several locations in the PLC. The Triple R and Arrow deposits exhibit downhole spectral trends related to the crystallinity and thermal maturity of clays (illite and kaolinite) and mineralization. The K-Ar dates of silt-and-clay size fractions (10–6 µm; 6–2 µm; 2–0.6 µm; 0.6–0.2 µm; <0.2 µm) from five clay-altered samples decrease with grain size, and span 1608 ± 17 Ma to 1060 ± 14 Ma for the Spitfire discovery (n = 14) and 1342 ± 17 Ma to 289 ± 4.3 Ma for the Arrow deposit (n = 4). Alteration assemblages are broadly similar to Athabasca Basin basement-hosted deposits, and K-Ar dates indicate that high-grade uranium mineralization in the PLC reflects remobilization and concentration of primary ores. Integration of geochronology, clay mineralogy and VNIR-SWIR spectral parameters identify fertile fluid conduits when expanded to property- or corridor-scales, and provide additional evidence that ore grades of the Athabasca Basin deposits reflect several stages of hydrothermal mineralization spanning ∼1000 Ma.Thematic collection: This article is part of the Uranium Fluid Pathways collection available at: https://www.lyellcollection.org/cc/uranium-fluid-pathwaysSupplementary material:https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.c.6033890
期刊介绍:
Geochemistry: Exploration, Environment, Analysis (GEEA) is a co-owned journal of the Geological Society of London and the Association of Applied Geochemists (AAG).
GEEA focuses on mineral exploration using geochemistry; related fields also covered include geoanalysis, the development of methods and techniques used to analyse geochemical materials such as rocks, soils, sediments, waters and vegetation, and environmental issues associated with mining and source apportionment.
GEEA is well-known for its thematic sets on hot topics and regularly publishes papers from the biennial International Applied Geochemistry Symposium (IAGS).
Papers that seek to integrate geological, geochemical and geophysical methods of exploration are particularly welcome, as are those that concern geochemical mapping and those that comprise case histories. Given the many links between exploration and environmental geochemistry, the journal encourages the exchange of concepts and data; in particular, to differentiate various sources of elements.
GEEA publishes research articles; discussion papers; book reviews; editorial content and thematic sets.