Four world titanium mining provinces

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
K. J. Stanaway
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
13
File Size:
2585 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2005

Abstract

Major world ilmenite and rutile accumulations reveal similar regional geology and Proterozoic age deeper crustal source rocks. During crustal collision titanium crystallizes as ilmenite and rutile at buried sites of high pressure and temperature rock metamorphism. Hydrothermal activity can convert titanium minerals to rutile, but titanium migration and enrichment seem only local. Many melts crystallize rocks with iron-titanium oxides in solid solution, but titanium enrichment at economic scale takes place in basic intrusive melts often associated with anorthosites and charnokite. Sedimentary placer enrichments have formed since the Proterozoic with water-resistant ilmenite, and rutile segregating by gravity from quartz sands deposited from flowing water. Placers have residual, alluvial, strand and shallow marine variants. Time, organic acids, and sand permeability play lead roles in the leaching of iron from ilmenite during weathering and diagenesis.
Citation

APA: K. J. Stanaway  (2005)  Four world titanium mining provinces

MLA: K. J. Stanaway Four world titanium mining provinces. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 2005.

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