New Developments in Manganese Module Prospects, with Emphasis on the Australasian Region

The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Cronan DS Colwell JB
Organization:
The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Pages:
10
File Size:
731 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1990

Abstract

Manganese nodules cover great areas of deep ocean floor far from land, and have long been considered a major potential resource of nickel, copper, cobalt and perhaps manganese. A decade ago there was a period of intense evaluation of nodule fields, especially those lying between the Clarion and Clipperton Fracture Zones in international waters southeast of Hawaii. There, nodules are abundant and of high grade (average of 2.4% Ni+Cu+Co). The evaluation activity has since declined, but a recent agreement on lease boundaries among all interested parties may lead to a resurgence of work. Indeed, French and Japanese groups have pushed ahead with field and economic assessments.The Southwest Pacific, where there are large nodule fields in the waters of the Cook Islands and Kiribati, has seen considerable assessment of resources in the last ten years, especially through a major field programme of the Japanese Metal Mining Agency. The best prospect appears to be in the South Penrhyn Basin, in Cook Islands waters, where nodules are very abundant but of only moderate grade (1% Ni+Cu+Co). Using a cut-off of 5 kg of wet nodules per m2, Cronan (1989) and Cronan et al. (1989) have estimated the total resource to be a huge 110 million tonnes of Ni+Cu+Co.
Citation

APA: Cronan DS Colwell JB  (1990)  New Developments in Manganese Module Prospects, with Emphasis on the Australasian Region

MLA: Cronan DS Colwell JB New Developments in Manganese Module Prospects, with Emphasis on the Australasian Region. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1990.

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