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Sedimentary Mineral Deposits

A series of papers on manganese metallogenesis appeared in a journal issue edited by Frakes and Bolton [1992]. They also reviewed the mode of origin of Phanerozoic sedimentary manganese deposits and correlated their occurrences with variations in ocean chemistry, sea level and paleoclimate. They concluded that extensive Mn carbonate and oxide precipitation occurred during periods of regression; these periods promote oxidation of seafloor organic matter, release of CO and global greenhouse warming.

Some unusual Ni-Mo-PGE-bearing black shales in China were studied by Murowchick et al. [1994], who concluded that they formed via venting of metalliferous hydrothermal fluids into an anoxic, phosphogenic basin. Large variations in ion microprobe S/S values for pyrite implied that bacteriogenic seawater sulfate reduction associated with organic matter decomposition was an important mechanism for ore deposition.

Most of our domestic uranium resources occur in Tertiary non-marine sandstone deposits that are thought to have formed by groundwater transport and deposition. Sanford [1994] developed a four-layer finite difference model for the formation of tabular sandstone uranium deposits. His results indicated that regional fluid flow was gravity-driven, with discharge concentrated at lake shorelines or playa margins. Inferred zones of mixed local and regional groundwater discharge were associated with the ore zones; these data support a fluid interface mixing mechanism for ore deposition.

Precambrian conglomerates rich in detrital pyrite, uraninite and quartz continue to challenge economic geologists as well as paleoclimatologists, because such a combination of minerals cannot survive fluvial transport in our present oxygen-rich atmosphere. Vennemann et al. [1992] found variable O values in adjacent quartz pebbles and their contained fluid inclusions in Archean conglomerates from the Witwatersrand (South Africa) and Huronian (Canada) districts. They concluded that the pebbles preserved their predepositional oxygen isotopic compositions and fluid inclusion chemistry. Both areas exhibited quartz pebble O modes consistent with derivation from erosion of Archean granites and pegmatites. However, the Witwatersrand pebbles exhibited a broader, heavier range in O values, suggesting an additional source of quartz from erosion of Archean greenstone belt lode gold deposits. This provenance difference may explain the presence of both Au and U in the Witwatersrand ores, but only Au in the Huronian ores. The O values and fluid inclusion characteristics of the quartz pebbles were inconsistent with previous proposals for their derivation from Archean exhalative deposits.



next up previous
Next: Ore-Forming Processes and Up: Studies of Specific Previous: Metamorphosed Ore Deposits



U.S. National Report to IUGG, 1991-1994
Rev. Geophys. Vol. 33 Suppl., © 1995 American Geophysical Union