Combination of Novel Mineralogical Methods in the Study of Noble Metal Ores - Focus on Pristine (Bushveld, Great Dyke)

- Organization:
- The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 7
- File Size:
- 1156 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 2008
Abstract
A combination of novel and æclassicÆ methods, namely electric pulse disaggregation (EPD), hydroseparation (HS), preparation of monolayer polished sections, and mineral liberation analysis (MLA) was employed to study ores from platinum pipes (Bushveld Complex, South Africa), pristine PGE mineralisation of the Main Sulfide Zone (Great Dyke, Zimbabwe), as well as ancient and modern gold/PGM placer deposits. It is shown here that the EPD technique liberates mineral grains of interest without any visible destruction allowing the study and analysis of individual rock-forming and ore minerals, in our case especially platinum-group minerals. The HS method is an effective tool in concentrating heavy minerals by factors up to 10 000 fold. As near-total recovery of grains >10 ¦m is achieved, the nugget effect can be overcome also in case of limited availability of samples (drill core, museum specimens). The MLA technique is a fast tool to detect and characterise mineral phases in ores and ore processing products. Many mineralogical parameters of individual grains and mineral assemblages can be deducted and documented. The results show that the techniques employed, either on their own or in combination, provide a wide range of additional information especially on platinum ores which is beneficial to both the researcher and the metallurgist.
Citation
APA:
(2008) Combination of Novel Mineralogical Methods in the Study of Noble Metal Ores - Focus on Pristine (Bushveld, Great Dyke)MLA: Combination of Novel Mineralogical Methods in the Study of Noble Metal Ores - Focus on Pristine (Bushveld, Great Dyke). The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 2008.