Banded Iron Formation to High-Grade Iron Ore - The Fallacy of Supergene Enrichment

- Organization:
- The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 6
- File Size:
- 944 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 2008
Abstract
Martite-goethite high-grade iron ore deposits that show no trace of hydrothermal alteration may extend to more than 200 m below the permanent water table and are typically saprolite with evidence of exposure to the physical, chemical and biogenic processes of soil formation restricted to the low-grade goethitised upper levels. Typically no evidence of the prior presence of chert bands is discernable within the ore yet it has been assumed that these ore deposits derive from cherty banded iron formation (BIF) through supergene leaching of the chert bands and thus classified as supergene iron ore deposits. The fact that chert bands are absent and that these ore deposits are highly weathered does not prove supergene leaching of the chert bands. Quartz is one of the most resistant minerals to chemical weathering within the saprolite and large scale dissolution of quartz is absent from all other quartz-bearing saprolites, yet this unlikely process is accepted without question as the origin of the most abundant form of high-grade iron ore deposits. It is proposed that martite-goethite high-grade iron ore deposits formed only from BIF in which chert bands were absent prior to weathering. An EXTENDED ABSTRACT is available for download. A full-length paper was not prepared for this presentation.
Citation
APA: (2008) Banded Iron Formation to High-Grade Iron Ore - The Fallacy of Supergene Enrichment
MLA: Banded Iron Formation to High-Grade Iron Ore - The Fallacy of Supergene Enrichment. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 2008.