Magmatic depositssulfides Ni and Cr PGE - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 27
About This Presentation
Title:

Magmatic depositssulfides Ni and Cr PGE

Description:

and the Onaping Formation volcaniclastic/breccia sequence. The Sudbury Igneous Complex ... lowest in the Sublayer and increase towards the Footwall Breccia. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:444
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 28
Provided by: glNt
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Magmatic depositssulfides Ni and Cr PGE


1
Magmatic depositssulfides (Ni and Cr) PGE
2
Alkali feldspars at low pressures two
complete solid solutions with a solvus
Immiscibility field
3
???? ??? ???() ??? Native Copper Cu 100 ???
Chalcopyrite CuFeS2 34.5 ??? Bornite Cu5FeS4
63.3 ??? Chalcocite Cu2S 79.8 ? ? Covellite CuS
66.4 ???? Enargite Cu3AsS4 48.3 ????
Tetrahedrite (Cu,Fe)12As4S13 57.0 ??? Tennantite
(Cu,Fe)12Sb4S13 52.1 ??? Cuprite Cu2O 88.8 ???
Tenorite CuO 79.8 ??? Malachite CuCO3.Cu(OH)2
57.3 ??? Azurite2 CuCO3.Cu(OH)2 55.1 ???
Chalcocyanite CuSO4 ?? Chalcanthite
CuSO4.5H2O ???? Cuprocopiapite CuFe43(SO4)6(OH)2.
20H2O ???? Chrysocolla CuSiO3.2H2O 36.0
4
??? ??? ??? ??? (Millerite) NiS ????
(Pentlandite) (Fe,Ni)9S8 ( Co ?1-3), Pt,
Pd ????? (Violarite) FeS.Ni2S3 ???? (Nickeline)
NiAs ???? (Gersdorffite) NiAsS ????
(Breithauptite) NiSb ????? (Garnierite)
Ni(Si4O10)(OH)4.4H2O (NiOlt46) ???? (Nimite)
(Ni,Mg)6(Si4O10)(OH)8 ????? (Ni-Nontronite)
(NiO1-2) ?? (Anrabergite) Ni3(AsO4).8H2O (NiO37)
5
Characteristics of PGE in magmatic processes
????(platinum group elements,??PGE)???(Ru)??(Rh)?
?(Pd)??(Os)??(Ir)??(Pt)?????????????????? (??1112
),????????????(??21.422)????? ???????????????????
????,??????? ?????,???????? ?????????,???????????
,??????,??? ????????????????????Os?Ru?Ir?????? ???
????????????????????????????? ???,????????????????
????????????,?????????Pt 2.0g/t,Pd 1.3g/t, Os
1.0g/t,Ir 0.7g/t,Rh 0.5g/t,Ru 1.3g/t?????,????????
??????????????????????,???????? ?????????????,???
????????????? ???????????
6
Sudbury, Ontario
7
(No Transcript)
8
(No Transcript)
9
  • SUDBURY MINING CAMP
  • To date, the Sudbury mining camp has produced
  • in excess of 16 billion pounds of nickel,
  • 15 billion pounds of copper,
  • 85 million ounces of silver,
  • 17 million ounces of platinum, and 3 million
    ounces of gold and remains, to this day, Canadas
    principal producer of platinum.
  • Currently, there are 35 producing mines in the
    Sudbury Camp.

10
  • GEOLOGY OF THE SUDBURY REGION
  • The Sudbury region is dominated by a large 60 km
    long by 30 km wide elliptical depression known as
    the Sudbury Structure which lies at the junction
    of three unique geological-structural provinces
    the granitic gneissic basement rocks of the
    Archean Superior Province to the north, the
    supracrustal metasediments and metavolcanics of
    the Early-Proterozoic Southern Province to the
    south, and the Middle-Proterozoic Grenville Front
    Tectonic Zone.

11
(No Transcript)
12
  • GEOLOGY OF THE SUDBURY STRUCTURE
  • The Sudbury Structure constitutes the largest
    known concentrations of nickel-copper-PGE bearing
    sulfide minerals in the world. Due to its
    economic importance, the structure is one of the
    most intensively studied and documented regions
    of the Canadian Shield.
  • Stratigraphically, from top to bottom, the
    Sudbury Structure consists of the Whitewater
    Group of sediments, the underlying Sudbury
    Igneous Complex (SIC), and brecciated footwall
    rocks surrounding the SIC.

13
  • The Whitewater Group
  • Infilling the central depression of the Sudbury
    Structure are the Whitewater Group sediments that
    consist of, from top to bottom
  • the Chelmsford Formation greywacke,
  • the Onwatin Formation manganese-rich slate,
  • and the Onaping Formation volcaniclastic/breccia
    sequence.

14
  • The Sudbury Igneous Complex
  • Underlying the Whitewater Group is the
    Sudbury Igneous Complex (SIC). The SIC consists
    of a lower zone of augite-bearing norite a thin
    middle layer (Transition Zone) consisting of
    norite grading upwards into quartz gabbro and an
    upper zone of micropegmatite/granophyre. At the
    base of the lower zone is a discontinuous zone of
    inclusion and sulfide-rich norite-gabbro commonly
    known as the Contact Sublayer (Sublayer). The
    Sublayer occurs as gently dipping sheets or
    irregular lenses along the base of the SIC or as
    small bodies in radial depressions or troughs in
    the base of the SIC called embayments, and as
    steeply dipping dikes called offsets which
    intrude into the adjacent footwall. The Sublayer
    is typically gabbroic in the base of the SIC and
    in the embayments, and typically quartz-diorite
    in the offset dikes. All Ni-Cu-PGE deposits of
    the Sudbury Structure are contained within the
    Sublayer and related structures such as the
    offset dikes.

15
  • There are two types of offset dikes
  • 1. radial, which appear to stem directly from the
    Sublayer
  • and intrude into the footwall rocks radially
    away from the SIC.
  • 2. concentric dikes, which are thought to be
    related to ring
  • faults and may be connected to the Sublayer at
    depth or
  • represent accumulations of melt rock associated
    with
  • pseudo-tachylyte formation.

16
  • Origin of the Sudbury Structure
  • Existing evidence for the origin of the Sudbury
    Structure supports a meteorite impact. This
    includes the irregular and dike-like bodies of
    pseudo-tachylyte breccias (Sudbury and Footwall
    breccias) up to 70 km from the margins of the
    structure shatter cones in rocks marginal to the
    structure the 1.8 km-thick volcaniclastics/brecci
    as of the Onaping formation (interpreted as
    fallback breccia) and shock deformation lamellae
    in quartz and feldspar in country rock inclusions
    within the Onaping formation. The following
    summarizes the evolution of the Sudbury area.

17
(No Transcript)
18
(No Transcript)
19
(No Transcript)
20
  • MINERALIZATION AND DEPOSIT TYPES OF THE SUDBURY
    STRUCTURE
  • Sudbury ores are typically zoned. Fractional
    crystallization of a monosulfide solid solution
    from a sulfide melt is believed to have given
    rise to a cumulate phase rich in Fe, Co, Rh, Ru,
    Ir and Os (pyrrhotite-rich ores) and a
    fractionated liquid rich in Ni, Cu, Pt, Pd, and
    Au (chalcopyrite and PGE-rich ores). In some
    cases, the liquid phase is then believed to have
    migrated out from the Sublayer and further
    fractionated to form Cu and PGE rich footwall
    ores.
  • Common Ni and Cu-ore minerals consist of
    pyrrhotite, pentlandite, chalcopyrite with minor
    pyrite, and cubanite (CuFe2S3).
  • Sudbury Ni-Cu-PGE sulfide mineralization occurs
    in three deposit settings

21
  • Contact deposits or embayment deposits
  • Located along the lower contact of the SIC in
    association with the norite-gabbro
    inclusion-bearing Sublayer. The Sublayer may be
    up to 100 metres thick. The greatest thicknesses
    are found in kilometer-size radial embayments
    within which are smaller, secondary troughs or
    terraces. The highest sulfide concentrations in
    the Sublayer are found within these embayments
    where sulfide distribution is further controlled
    by the terraces. Large concentrations of sulfides
    and nickel are often found in footwall deposits
    immediately adjacent to the terraces. Cu/Ni
    ratios are typically lowest in the Sublayer and
    increase towards the Footwall Breccia.
  • The Sublayer constitutes a well defined
    exploration target and has been a prolific
    producer over the years. Consequently contact
    deposits comprise 21 of the 35 mines in the
    Sudbury area. Contact deposits at the base of the
    SIC are still currently being mined by both
    Falconbridge and Inco at the Falconbridge, Garson
    and Levack mines.

22
  • Footwall deposits
  • Zones of sulfide mineralization in the form of
    stringers, veins, massive sheets and/or
    disseminated sulfide which appear to have
    migrated outwards from the Sublayer and/or
    Footwall Breccia and penetrated deeply into the
    footwall rocks. The Frood-Stobie Mine, which is
    estimated to have originally contained a geologic
    resource of 450 to 500 million tonnes, is the
    largest and best example of a footwall deposit.
    This mine lies at the east end of the South Range
    Breccia Belt and is situated almost 2 km into the
    footwall.
  • Offset Dike deposits
  • Associated with radial and concentric
    quartz-diorite dikes that extend from the
    Sublayer into the footwall rocks. Mineralization
    typically occurs as disseminated to massive
    sulfides within the dikes. The massive sulfide
    bodies are often rimmed by a halo of disseminated
    material that is often found along the contacts
    of the dike. Examples of offset deposits include
    Nickel Offsets along the Foy Offset dike, and the
    Copper Cliff North and South mines and the Totten
    Mine along the Copper Cliff Offset and
    Worthington Offset dikes, respectively.

23
(No Transcript)
24
(No Transcript)
25
(No Transcript)
26
(No Transcript)
27
Great Dyke 330 mile long, 4 mile wide, consists
of layers of ultrabasic rocks now largely
altered to serpentine. The dyke deposits are
bands of chromite about 8 inches
thick. Stillwater, Montana an E-W belt about 50
km long and 1 km wide. Muskox, NW Territories a
Pre-Cambrian layered ultramafic complex.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com