Title: Mineral Exploration Geology
1Mineral Exploration Geology
- Exploration Geochemistry
- Reference Marjoribanks 1997. Geological Methods
in Mineral Exploration and Mining. Chapman and
Hall. Ch8.
2Exploration Geochemistry
- Geochemistry is a fundamental aspect of virtually
every exploration program - It has evolved from simple assaying of the
commodity in question eg Au, to identifying
subtle geochemical anomalies using major and
trace elements contained in surficial sediments
eg soil, laterite, till, vegetation or
groundwater - The object of geochemistry is to define a
geochemical anomaly which distinguishes an ore
deposit from background and insignificant
mineralisation - A geochemical survey can be divided into 5
phases - 1) Planning
- 2) Sampling
- 3) Chemical Analysis
- 4) Interpretation
- 5) Follow up
Essential Jargon assay, geochemistry, laterite,
till, anomaly
3Useful Resources
- Web-resources
- Geochemistry, Exploration, Environment, Analysis
http//www.aeg.org/ - Geochemistry Web Links
- On-Line Manuals
- Geol Sci 455 Chapters
- Exploration GEOCHEMISTRY
- GEOCHEMISTRY LINKS
- The Geochemical Society
- Geochem Online Manual
- Geochem Resources
- Texts
- Evans, A. M. 1995. Introduction to Mineral
Exploration. Blackwell Science. - Govett, G. J. S. 1983. Handbook of Exploration
Geochemistry series. Elsevier. - Evans, A. M. 1997. Introduction to Economic
Geology and its Environmental Impact. Blackwell
Science.
41. Planning
- Choice of geochemical surveys and analytical
methods depends on the commodity sought and the
nature of the terrain/geomorphology/geology - A geologist must start with a knowledge of A) the
elements associated with a particular deposit
type (table 8.1), B) an idea of the size of the
deposit being sought, C) the mineralogical form
of the elements, and D) the probable size of the
elemental anomalies around it - An ore deposit is usually surrounded by lower
concentrations of the mined elements, which are
significantly enriched compared with
unmineralised country rock. This is known as the
primary halo. An initial geochem survey must
atleast be able to pick up an anomaly from the
primary dispersion. - The geochem response at the surface depends on
the type of terrain and on the type of material
covering the deposit as well as the element in
question. Different elements have different
solubilities eg in a VMS cu/Pb/Zn deposit, Zn is
more mobile in the surface environm and is
dispersed further than cu-Pb. This is referred to
as secondary dispersion - Background levels of elements in the medium being
sampled must be considered. The concentration
will vary depending on the mode of formation and
composition of the rock and the processes forming
the soil eg enriched and depleted zones in a
regolith profile
Essential Jargon commodity, dispersal,
solubility, terrain, primary halo, primary
dispersion, secondary dispersion, pathfinder
elements, background levels, regolith
51.1 Orientation Surveys
- A key aspect of planning a successful geochemical
survey is to evaluate which techniques are
effective for A) the commodity being sought and
B) the area being explored - This involves undertaking an orientation survey
in which a number of sampling methods are tested
over a known deposit in a similar environment to
determine the method which yields the best
results. This involves 1) Understanding of
target deposit type 2) Understanding of
surficial environm of search area 3) Nature of
primary secondary dispersion 4) Sample types
available 5) Systematic sample collection
procedures 6) Sample size requirements 7)
Sample interval, orientation and aerial density
8) Field observations 9) Sample preperation
procedures 10) Sample fraction for analysis 11)
Analytical method 12) Elemental suite
(pathfinder elements) 13) Data format for
presentation and interpretation
62. Analysis
- A geologist will generally see little of the
processes of analysis, which is usually done at a
commercial laboratory. As a result geochemical
data tend to be used uncritically, which can be
be risky and expensive. Errors do happen! It is
important for the geologist to monitor and check
the quality of the data produced by the labs - 2.1 Accuracy and Precision
- The critical question for a geologist is, how
reproducible the analysis is (precision eg or -
5ppb Au) and how representative of the correct
concentration the result is (accuracy) - Precision is tested by analysing samples in
duplicate - Accuracy requires the analysis of a sample of
known composition -reference material
Essential Jargon accuracy, precision,
duplicates, reference material, contamination
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8Sample Collection and Preparation
- Samples should be collected in non-metallic
containers to avoid contamination - Most sample prep carried out in field eg sieving
soils - Drying, disaggregation and sieving to obtain the
desired fraction - Imperative to eliminate contamination in this
process eg clean crushing equipment between
samples, dont wear gold jewellery when
collecting samples.
9Analytical Methods
- It is impossible at present to analyse for all
elements simultaneously at required levels and
each new analysis brings added expense so in
exploration compromises have to be made - Expensive High-tech
- ICP-ES - Inductively Coupled Plasma Emission
Spectrometry - ICP-MS - Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass
Spectrometry - XRF - X-ray Fluorescence (non-destructive)
- NAA - Neutron activation analysis
- Inexpensive Low-tech
- AAS - Atomic Absorbtion spectrophotometry
(solvent extraction aqua-regia) - Fire Assay - precious metals are extracted into a
small button (melting) which is seperated from
the slag and determined by AAS, ICP-ES/MS - The analysis of precious metals is different from
base metals in that large sub-samples (30-50g)
are analysed as opposed to base metals (0.25-1g)
to overcome the grainy or nuggety effect - Element association eg Ni occurs in ultramafic
rocks in either olivine (uneconomic) or sulfides
(economic). Therefore acids that digest sulfides
(nitric or HCl) are prefered over those that
attack silicates (HF)
10Analytical Methods
113. Interpretation
- Geochemical results are usually multi-element and
a large number of samples. This will invariable
require the use of statistical analysis on
computers to check for precision and accuracy
12Statistics
- The object of geochem exploration is to define
significant anomalies - The best way to evaluate geochemical data is by
graphical representation using histograms and box
plots (Fig 8.5) - Homogenous data will form a log-normal
distribution whereas if the data falls into
distinct groups they will be multi-nodal - Contour plots using the intervals from the
histograms (Fig 8.8) - Anomalous areas then need to be investigated
using detailed geology and regolith mapping,
topography and general site investigation to look
for possible contaminant sources eg mine dumps,
tailings dams
13Statistics Daisy Ck
90
210
Straight line
Curve
100ppm
90
210
Straight line
14Element correlation -Daisy Ck
Weak correlation
Strong correlation
154. Reconnaissance Techniques
- 4.1 Stream sediment sampling
- Relies on active physical weathering to obtain a
representative sample of an entire catchment - Sample fraction depends on the environment.
Temperate terrains - max contrast for trace
metals is found in the fine fraction (80 mesh or
lt190um) due to the high organic content, clays,
Fe-Mn oxides - Base metals (0.5 kg), Au (10 kg of sieved -2mm
material) - Sample usually taken as a number of sub-samples
20-30m along the stream at a depth of 10-15cm to
avoid excess Fe-Mn oxides - Avoid upstream contaminant sources such as roads,
factories, farms, mines - Panning for heavy mineral concentrates can be a
useful way of enhancing weak signals but tends to
be less quantitative and more subjective but can
be very useful in remote areas where access to
labs is restricted or when the exploration budget
dries up
16Mineralzn along lithological strike
Known mineralzn
Mineralzn along fault strike
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184.2 Lake sediments
- Glaciated areas are often accompanied by small
lakes (tarns) which provide an ideal sampling
medium for reconnaissance exploration as they are
accessible by air and can be sampled by dropping
a heavy sampler into the lake sediment and
retrieving it - Data is interpreted in a similar manner to stream
sediments - Lake sediment data is only useful if glacial
material is locally derived and is ineffective in
glacio-lacustrine environments
19Panning
- Density contrasts
- Heavy mineral concentrates
- Enhance weak signals
- Collects precious metals, gossanous fragments
rich in metals, cassiterite, zircon, cinnabar,
barite and most gemstones diamond, sapphire - Useful in remote areas where lab turn-around
times are high - Not particularly quantitative
20Overburden Geochemistry
- Often used as a follow-up to stream sediment
surveys in areas of residual overburden - Method of sampling depends upon the nature of the
overburden. The cheap option of sampling soil is
only used when the chemistry of the surface soil
is known to reflect the geology below. Soil
sampling does not always work in glaciated,
windblown and lateritic environments where trace
metals have from or to the subsurface layers
21Surface Soil Sampling
- The type of soil present represents the surface
processes operating and these are quite varied. - The most effective soil samples are generally
from the B-horizon located some 30cm depth (Fig
8.12). Formed by the downward movement of clays,
organic material and Fe-oxides - It is essential that the characteristics of the
soil sample are recorded and that the same
horizon is consistently sampled - 100-200g sample for base metals 0.5-2kg for Au
- Spacing depends upon the size of the primary halo
and the strike length and width of the potential
target
22Lag Sampling in Lateritic Profiles
- Pisolites formed in the ferruginous zone of a
regolith profile tend to concentrate trace
elements and can provide an effective sampling
medium in highly weathered lateritic terrains - The large (0.5-3cm) pisoliths are swept up off
the surface and the results are treated similar
to soil geochemistry except the background levels
tend to be elevated - The potential anomaly is dispersed over a greater
area and will be of a higher magnitude than that
of soil, however it tends to be less consistent
than soil surveys
23Soil Profiles and Geochemistry
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25Element Mobility
26Topography and Geochemistry
274.4 Hydrogeochemistry
- Uses water as a sampling medium
- Useful in arid regions with poor outcrop or deep
surficial cover - Deep water wells can tap into deep aquifers
(ground water) that can be used to explore in the
subsurface - Extremely low detection levels are required -
precious metals 2 ppt, base-metals ppm.
284.5 Gases
- Gases can be a useful sampling medium in areas of
thick overburden but have not proved to be
particularly useful in mineral exploration - Mercury is the only metal to form a vapour at
room temperature - Radon is generated during the decay of U and has
been used with some success - The enrichment of carbon-dioxide and the
depletion of oxygen caused by the weathering of
sulfide deposits is being tested in Western USA
294.6 Vegetation
- Two methods 1) the presence of a particular plant
species can indicate the presense of a particular
rock/ore type and is referred to as Geobotany
2) the elemental content of a particular plant is
measured and is referred to as Geochemistry
305. Follow-up Sampling
- Required to define the source of the anomaly in
more detail - 5.1 Rock-chip geochemistry
- Used where there is good outcrop
- Most effective when used in conjunction with
drillcore - Very useful in delineating disseminated ore
bodies but can be hit and miss with high-grade
veined or stockwork orebodies - I kg sample is sufficient usually with chips
taken as a composite over a specific distance eg
1 m composites in order to get a representative
sample
Essential Jargon
316. Summary
- Exploration geos are more likely to be directly
involved in geochem surveys than geophysical ones
so they must have a good knowledge of its
application - Geochemical programs require
- Planning choice of appropriate field survey and
analytical methods for a particular commodity - Orientation survey to test a variety of sampling
methods over a deposit of similar geology to that
of the target and in similar topographical
conditions - Analysis of samples should be monitored by
submitting standards and duplicates to check for
accuracy and precision - It must be determined whether the overburden
material being sampled is residual or transported - Overburden geochem is often a follow-up to stream
sediment surveys