ores

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Ores • Principally we discuss ores as sources of metals • However, there are many other resources bound in minerals which we find useful • How many can we think of?

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Ores. Principally we discuss ores as sources of metals However, there are many other resources bound in minerals which we find useful How many can we think of?. http://eps.berkeley.edu/courses/eps50/documents/lecture31.mineralresources.pdf. Ore Deposits. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Ores

Ores• Principally we discuss ores as sources of

metals

• However, there are many other resources bound in minerals which we find useful

• How many can we think of?

Page 2: Ores

http://eps.berkeley.edu/courses/eps50/documents/lecture31.mineralresources.pdf

Page 3: Ores

Ore Deposits• A deposit contains an unusually high

concentration of particular element(s)

• This means the element(s) have been concentrated in a particular area due to some process

• What sort of processes might concentrate these elements in one place?

Page 4: Ores

Gold Au• Distribution of Au in the crust = 3.1 ppb by

weight 3.1 units gold / 1,000,000,000 units of total crust = 0.00000031% Au

• Concentration of Au needed to be economically viable as a deposit = few g/t 3 g / 1000kg = 3g/ 1,000,000 g = 0.00031% Au

• Need to concentrate Au at least 1000-fold to be a viable deposit

• Rare mines can be up to a few percent gold (extremely high grade)!

Page 5: Ores

Ore minerals• Minerals with economic value are ore

minerals

• Minerals often associated with ore minerals but which do not have economic value are gangue minerals

• Key to economic deposits are geochemical traps metals are transported and precipitated in a very concentrated fashion– Gold is almost 1,000,000 times less abundant

than is iron

Page 6: Ores

Economic Geology• Understanding of how metalliferous minerals

become concentrated key to ore deposits…

• Getting them out at a profit determines where/when they come out

Page 7: Ores

http://eps.berkeley.edu/courses/eps50/documents/lecture31.mineralresources.pdf

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Black smoker metal precipitation

http://oceanexplorer.noaa.gov/explorations/02fire/background/hirez/chemistry-hires.jpg

Page 12: Ores

Ore deposit environments• Magmatic

– Cumulate deposits – fractional crystallization processes can concentrate metals (Cr, Fe, Pt)

– Pegmatites – late staged crystallization forms pegmatites and many residual elements are concentrated (Li, Ce, Be, Sn, and U)

• Hydrothermal

– Magmatic fluid - directly associated with magma

– Porphyries - Hot water heated by pluton

– Skarn – hot water associated with contact metamorphisms

– Exhalatives – hot water flowing to surface

– Epigenetic – hot water not directly associated with pluton

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• Sedimentary– Placer – weathering of primary minerals and transport

by streams (Gold, diamonds, other)– Banded Iron Formations – 90%+ of world’s iron tied

up in these– Evaporite deposits – minerals like gypsum, halite

deposited this way– Laterites – leaching of rock leaves residual materials

behind (Al, Ni, Fe)– Supergene – reworking of primary ore deposits

remobilizes metals (often over short distances)

Ore deposit environments

Page 14: Ores

Geochemical Traps• Similar to chemical sedimentary rocks – must leach

material into fluid, transport and deposit ions as minerals…

• pH, redox, T changes and mixing of different fluids results in ore mineralization

• Cause metals to go from soluble to insoluble• Sulfides (reduced form of S) strongly binds metals

many important metal ore minerals are sulfides!• Oxides – Oxidizing environments form

(hydroxy)oxide minerals, very insoluble metal concentrations (especially Fe, Mn, Al)

Page 15: Ores

Hydrothermal Ore Deposits• Thermal gradients induce convection of water –

leaching, redox rxns, and cooling create economic mineralization

Page 16: Ores

Massive sulfide deposits• Hot, briny, water

leaches metals from basaltic ocean rocks

• Comes in contact with cool ocean water

• Sulfides precipitate

Page 17: Ores

Vermont Copperbelt• Besshi-type massive sulfide deposits• Key Units:

– Giles Mountain formation – More siliciclastic, including graphitic pelite, quartoze granofels (metamorphosed greywacke), hornblende schist, amphibolite

– Standing Pond Volcanics – mostly a fine grained hormblende-plagioclase amphibolite, likely formed from extrusive basaltic rocks (local evidence of pillow structures in St. Johnsbury). Felsic dike near Springfiled VT yielded a U-Pb age of 423± 4 Ma.

– Waits River formation – Calcareous pelite (metamorphosed mudstone), metalimestone, metadolostone, quartzite.