Barium Dispersion in Drainage Sediments in Arid Climatic Regimes

- Organization:
- The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 1
- File Size:
- 25 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1988
Abstract
Barium anomalies in drainage sediments can act as indicators of barite mineralization and path- finders for lead-zinc mineralization. Their detection in an arid climate has been investigated in two areas of Saudi Arabia. At Rabigh, 150 km north of Jeddah, barium anomalies found in wadi sediments reflect barite veins which occupy Tertiary faults in Precambrian metavolcanics and granodiorite. In the Wadi ad Dawasir area, 650 km east of Jeddah, the sediments of wadis draining the Jabal Tuwayq escarpment have been found to contain anomalous concentrations of barium derived from diagenetic barite in the Sudair formation siltstones and shales. Barium dispersion in these wadis is predominantly clastic. Near to the source rocks, barium occurs in relatively coarse grains of barite. Owing to the three well-developed cleavages of barite, its crystals readily break into cleavage flakes during fluvial transport in flash floods; as a result, the longest anomalous dispersion trains are found in the 250 to 600 um fraction. Wadi sediments finer than 250 um have relatively constant and low barium contents, being dominantly composed of windblown sand.
Citation
APA:
(1988) Barium Dispersion in Drainage Sediments in Arid Climatic RegimesMLA: Barium Dispersion in Drainage Sediments in Arid Climatic Regimes. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1988.