Discovery of Uranium Mineralization in the Manyingee Channel, Onslow Region of Western Australia

- Organization:
- The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 13
- File Size:
- 2329 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1981
Abstract
Uranium exploration was commenced in 1973 and carried out at a regional scale over a wide area of the northern part of the Camarvon Basin of Western Australia by Minatome Australia Pty Limited and their joint-venture partners. As a result, pervasive uranium mineralization has been found in the Cretaceous sandstones near Manyingee Hills in the Onslow Region, which were probably deposited in a near-shore, fluvia deltaic palaeo-environment.Mineralization is generally found in poorly sorted argillaceous sandstones and siltstones near redox fronts formed by oxidizing waters circulating in reduced sediments. The principal minerals found in the two Manyingee deposits delineated so far are coffinite, uraninite with associated pyrite in the reduced zones, and phosphuranylite, siderite and limonite in the oxidized zones. The presence of dissolved uranium in the superficial aquifers, of secondary uranium minerals as coatings on granitic rocks, and of recent uranium-bearing calcrete sediments, suggest that the whole Cretaceous-Precambrian system has been subjected to the formation ofroll-front type uranium deposits since the Cretaceous. Continuing exploration is locating additional uranium occurrences. The deposits outlined so far are being evaluated for their amenability to in situ leaching tests planned for 1982-1983.
Citation
APA:
(1981) Discovery of Uranium Mineralization in the Manyingee Channel, Onslow Region of Western AustraliaMLA: Discovery of Uranium Mineralization in the Manyingee Channel, Onslow Region of Western Australia. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1981.