Depositional Facies and Heavy Mineral Deposits of the Yoganup Shoreline, Southern Perth Basin

- Organization:
- The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 7
- File Size:
- 1013 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1986
Abstract
Heavy minerals are mined from two fossil strandlines on the southern Swan Coastal Plain. The Capel shoreline, 7 km inland, and the Yoganup shoreline, 15 km inland are arcuate, northwest-facing, and remote from the modern coast. Based on foraminiferal and molluscan assemblages, the shorelines are probably of Pliocene age. The Yoganup shoreline is adjacent to the Whicher Scarp, which is cut into the Leederville Formation (Lower Cretaceous) at the southern boundary of the Swan Coastal Plain. Stratigraphic relations and detailed sedimentology have been studied from temporary exposures in the Yoganup Extended and Yoganup North mines, within a strandline complex at 27 m and 18-33 m above sea level respectively. Heavy minerals were deposited in thin, shallowing-upward sequences along a wave-dominated clastic shoreline cut into pre-Cainozoic sediments. Lithofacies units deposited in eolian, foreshore, shoreface and lagoonal environments are the most significant sites of heavy mineral accumulation. The data collected provide a basis for further exploration.
Citation
APA:
(1986) Depositional Facies and Heavy Mineral Deposits of the Yoganup Shoreline, Southern Perth BasinMLA: Depositional Facies and Heavy Mineral Deposits of the Yoganup Shoreline, Southern Perth Basin. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1986.