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Are placer platinum nuggets formed during lateritization? The verdict from the Owendale Alaskan-Uralian Complex in Australia is an emphatic no!

Ma Bocheng and Reid R. Keays
Are placer platinum nuggets formed during lateritization? The verdict from the Owendale Alaskan-Uralian Complex in Australia is an emphatic no!
Economic Geology and the Bulletin of the Society of Economic Geologists (November 2023) 118 (8): 1835-1856

Abstract

The thick laterite developed over platinum group element (PGE)-bearing ultramafic rocks of the Owendale Alaskan-Uralian Complex in New South Wales, Australia, provides an ideal environment in which to address the question of whether Pt-Fe nuggets are formed during lateritization. This is an important issue to settle because Pt-Fe nuggets in alluvial placers and eluvial deposits associated with the Alaskan-Uralian complexes were the world's major source of Pt prior to the commencement of Pt production from the Bushveld Complex and continue to produce a significant amount of Pt. Some of the Owendale laterites have high Pt but low Cu contents, while others have both high Pt and high Cu contents. Heavy mineral concentrates were prepared from about 1 kg of drill chips from both types of laterites. Only five of the 61 samples processed contained any platinum group minerals (PGMs) greater than 5 mu m in size, even though many of the samples contained more than 1 g/t Pt. The largest PGM found was about 100 mu m long, and the majority were <20 mu m. The bulk of the PGMs recovered were zoned PGMs consisting of a core of isoferroplatinum mantled by tetraferroplatinum with an outer rim of tulameenite; many of these zoned PGMs are encased in hematite grains that often have high Pt contents and appear to be pseudomorphs after the PGMs. The textural evidence indicates that at least half of the primary PGMs in the ultramafic protoliths to the laterites were destroyed during weathering and that the liberated PGEs could have been available for the formation of PGM nuggets. However, despite the large amount of PGEs liberated during the destruction of the primary PGMs, no evidence was found for the neogenic growth of PGE nuggets. Rather, the Pt liberated during the destruction of the PGMs appears to have only traveled distances of micrometers to tens of centimeters to form Pt nanoparticles or Pt oxides or to be absorbed/adsorbed by the Fe oxide hosts.


ISSN: 0361-0128
EISSN: 1554-0774
Coden: ECGLAL
Serial Title: Economic Geology and the Bulletin of the Society of Economic Geologists
Serial Volume: 118
Serial Issue: 8
Title: Are placer platinum nuggets formed during lateritization? The verdict from the Owendale Alaskan-Uralian Complex in Australia is an emphatic no!
Affiliation: Chang'an University, School of Earth Sciences and Resources, Xi'an, China
Pages: 1835-1856
Published: 20231106
Text Language: English
Publisher: Economic Geology Publishing Company, Lancaster, PA, United States
References: 63
Accession Number: 2024-006249
Categories: Economic geology, geology of ore deposits
Document Type: Serial
Bibliographic Level: Analytic
Illustration Description: illus. incl. 3 tables, geol. sketch maps
S33°00'00" - S31°30'00", E146°30'00" - E148°00'00"
Secondary Affiliation: University of Melbourne, AUS, Australia
Country of Publication: United States
Secondary Affiliation: GeoRef, Copyright 2024, American Geosciences Institute. Abstract, Copyright, Society of Economic Geologists. Reference includes data from GeoScienceWorld, Alexandria, VA, United States
Update Code: 202404
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