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Ores

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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 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ores


1
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?

2
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?

3
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)!

4
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

5
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

6
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

7
Ore deposit environments
  • Sedimentary
  • Placer weathering of primary minerals and
    transport by streams (Gold, diamonds, other)
  • Banded Iron Formations 90 of worlds 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)

8
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)

9
Hydrothermal Ore Deposits
  • Thermal gradients induce convection of water
    leaching, redox rxns, and cooling create economic
    mineralization

10
Massive sulfide deposits
  • Hot, briny, water leaches metals from basaltic
    ocean rocks
  • Comes in contact with cool ocean water
  • Sulfides precipitate ?

11
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.

12
Minerals associated with economically recoverable
metals
  • Elemental forms
  • Sulfides
  • Oxides
  • Carbonates
  • Sulfate salt

Cuprite, Cu2O
Elemental copper
Malachite, Cu2CO3(OH)2
Chalcocite, Cu2S
Chalcanthite, CuSO45H2O
13
Sulfides Part 1
  • Substitution into sulfides is very common
  • As and Se substitute for S very easily
  • Au can substitute in cation sites (auriferrous
    minerals)
  • Different metals swap in and out pretty easily ?
    Cu and Fe for instance have a wide range of solid
    solution materials

14
Sulfide Minerals
  • Minerals with S- or S2- (monosulfides) or S22-
    (disulfides) as anionic group
  • Transition metals bonded with sulfide anion groups

15
Iron Sulfides
  • Mackinawite FeS
  • Greigite FexSy
  • Pyrite FeS2 (cubic)
  • Marcasite FeS2 (orthorhombic)
  • Troilite FeS end member
  • Pyrrhotite Fe1-xS (slightly deficient in iron)
  • Arsenopyrite FeAsS
  • Chalcopyrite CuFeS2

16
Other important sulfides
  • Galena PbS
  • Sphalerite/wurtzite ZnS
  • Cinnabar HgS
  • Molybdenite MoS
  • Covellite CuS
  • Chalcocite Cu2S
  • Acanthite or Argenite AgS
  • Stibnite Sb2S3
  • Orpiment As2S3 Realgar AsS

17
Sulfides are reduced minerals ? what happens when
they contact O2?
  • This is the basis for supergene enrichment and
    acidic mine drainage

18
Actively Oxidizing Pyrite
  • FeS2 3.5 O2 H2O ? Fe2 2 SO42- 2 H
  • FeS2 14 Fe3 8 H2O ? 15 Fe2 2 SO42- 16
    H
  • 14Fe2 3.5 O2 14H ? 14 Fe3 7 H2O
  • Sulfur species and H generation
  • FeS2 2 Fe3à 3 Fe2 ¼ S8 0 H
  • FeS2 7 Fe3 3 H2Oà 8 Fe2 0.5 S4O62- 6 H

19
AMD neutralization
  • Metals are soluble in low pH solutions can get
    100s of grams of metal into a liter of very
    acidic solution
  • HOWEVER eventually that solution will get
    neutralized (reaction with other rocks, CO2 in
    the atmosphere, etc.) and the metals are not so
    soluble ? but oxidized S (sulfate, SO42-) is very
    soluble
  • A different kind of mineral is formed!

20
Ely Mine
21
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22
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