The Discovery and Geology of the Argyle Diamond Deposits, Kimberley, Western Australia
    
    - Organization:
 - The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
 - Pages:
 - 9
 - File Size:
 - 554 KB
 - Publication Date:
 - Jan 1, 1984
 
Abstract
The Argyle diamond deposits in the East  Kimberley were found as a result of a long  term exploration programme, begun in 1972 by  the Kalumburu Joint Venture (KJV), to search  for diamonds on the Kimberley craton. When  CRA Exploration Pty. Limited joined the KJV  in 1976, it was re-named the Ashton Joint  Venture (AJV). The Kimberley craton was  considered prospective by analogy with  structural settings of diamondiferous  kimberlites in Africa. Diamonds were found  during regional drainage sampling in Smoke  Creek in late 1979, which led directly to  the discovery of the rich Argyle lamproite  diatreme (AK1) and associated alluvial  deposits of Smoke and Limestone Creeks. The  diatreme intruded into quartzites,  sandstones and shales of Adelaidean age, and  consists predominantly of lapilli ash tuff,  with minor coarse and fine ash tuffs,  'non-sandy tuff' and olivine lamproite  dykes. Erosion of the diatreme has produced  the alluvial deposits of Smoke Creek and  Limestone Creek to the north and east.  Argyle diamonds are of predominately  industrial quality, and the typical diamond  is a brown, irregularly shaped, frosted,  heavily resorbed form with abundant graphite  inclusions, well developed etch channels and  prominent hexagonal surface depressions. The pre-feasibility evaluation of AK1  comprised diamond drilling, surface and  underground sampling, metallurgical  sampling, marketing studies and ore reserve  estimation. The proven AK1 ore reserve is  61Mtonne at 6.8ct/tonne. Evaluation of the  alluvial deposits gave results of Upper  Smoke Creek, 580 000 tonne at 4.6ct/tonne  and Limestone Creek, 1.7Mtonne at  3.5ct/tonne. Commercial production from the  two alluvial deposits began in 1983 with  production for the year reaching 6.2 Mct. Mining of the alluvial deposits at three to five Mct/year is proposed to continue  until the start of mining of the AK1 deposit  in late 1985 or early 1986 at which time a  new processing plant and associated infra- structure will have been constructed  adjacent to the AKl deposit in the Limestone  Creek area. Production is planned at three  Mtonne/year, producing 25Mct/year, which  will make Western Australia the largest  producer of natural diamond (by weight) in  the world.
Citation
APA: (1984) The Discovery and Geology of the Argyle Diamond Deposits, Kimberley, Western Australia
MLA: The Discovery and Geology of the Argyle Diamond Deposits, Kimberley, Western Australia. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1984.