The Iron Ore Deposits of the Mount Goldsworthy Area, Port Hedland District Western Australia (9bab30fb-7bc0-409c-9d77-1b7866dfa5ed)

The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Organization:
The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Pages:
24
File Size:
2001 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1964

Abstract

The iron ore deposits of the Port Hedland district of North Western Australia are associated with band'ed sedimentary iron formations that form part of the local succession of folded and faulted Archaean volcanic and sedimentary rocks. The iron formations are regarded as the protore beds or sources of the iron which became concentrated by supergene processes to form commercial grade iron ore deposits.Iron oxide deposits occurring in situ within the protore beds are considered to be of residual-replacement origin, due to supergene leaching of gangue minerals and' deposition of secondary iron oxides in their place, Two types of deposit have been recognized. Lode deposits are deep lenses of massive hematite located adjacent to major faults. These deposits are thought to be very old and to have originated by supergene processes during the long period of erosion represented by the major unconformity between the Archaean rocks and the overlying Proterozoic beds. The other type, known as crust ore deposits, are shallow cappings of hematite and goethite on hills formed by the outcrops of steeply dipping protore beds. These deposits could have originated as far back as the early Mesozoic and it is possible that the ore-forming process is continuing at a slow rate at the present day.Deposits formed by erosion and re-deposition of material derived from pre-existing residual-type deposits are known as derived deposits. These include conglomerates and scree accumulations of various types and ages and pisolitic deposits formed by supergene leaching of transported detritus. Derived deposits range in age from early Proterozoic to Recent. The presence of pebble accumulatio,ns of lode-type hematite in the Proterozoic basal conglomerate provides good evidence that lode hematite deposits existed in pre-Proterozoic times.INTRODUCTIONThe existence of iron ore deposits in the Port Hedland district of Western Australia has been known since the beginning of the century, but little attention was paid to them untIl the 1930's, when the Commonwealth Aerial, Geological and Geophysical Survey of Northern Australia carried out investigations of most of the then known mining fields of the Northwest Division. The only iron...
Citation

APA:  (1964)  The Iron Ore Deposits of the Mount Goldsworthy Area, Port Hedland District Western Australia (9bab30fb-7bc0-409c-9d77-1b7866dfa5ed)

MLA: The Iron Ore Deposits of the Mount Goldsworthy Area, Port Hedland District Western Australia (9bab30fb-7bc0-409c-9d77-1b7866dfa5ed). The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1964.

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