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A Review of Uranium Deposits in the Karoo Supergroup of South Africa*
Doug Cole1
Search and Discovery Article #80047 (2009)
Posted April 14, 2009
*Adapted from poster presentation at AAPG International Conference and Exhibition, Cape Town, South Africa, October 26-29, 2008
1Council for Geoscience, Bellville, South Africa (mailto:[email protected])
Uranium is present in the
form of fluvially-deposited, sandstone-hosted peneconcordant tabular deposits
in the Late Permian lower Beaufort Group (Adelaide Subgroup) and Late Triassic
Molteno and Elliot formations within the main Karoo Basin
and Late Permian
coal-hosted deposits in the Springbok Flats
Basin
. The sandstone-hosted
deposits generally contain less than 1000 t U in situ, the largest deposit
having 6791 t U. Average recoverable grades are 0.76 kg U/t. Metallogenesis
is thought to have been dependent upon uranium source, palaeoclimate and
availability of a reductant. Basement granite and volcanic ash have been
proposed as possible uranium sources for the Adelaide Subgroup and granite
for the Molteno and Elliot formations.
The warm, semi-arid palaeoclimate
of all these stratigraphic units implies an oxidising environment, which
was a prerequisite for the leaching and mobilisation of uranium from the
above sources. Uranium-bearing solutions moved through the sand bodies
with precipitation occurring in relatively sparse reduced zones that contained
carbonaceous debris. Coffinite and less abundant uraninite are the principal
ore minerals. Molybdenite, which is confined to ore in the Adelaide Subgroup
in the southwestern part of the main Karoo Basin
, forms a secondary economic
commodity. The coal-hosted deposits have grades of between 0.16 and 1 kg
U/t over 1 m width. Uranium is disseminated in the form of organo-metallic
compounds, coffinite, oyamalite and auerlite. It was mobilised from basement
granite by oxidised groundwater and was adsorbed by the coal several million
years after peat accumulation associated with a lacustrine environment.
The sandstone-hosted deposits have an estimated resource of 31,000 t U
and the coal-hosted deposits 55,000 t U.
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IntroductionTwo types of uranium
deposits are present in strata of the Karoo Supergroup in South
Africa. These are: (1) fluvially-deposited, sandstone-hosted, peneconcordant,
tabular deposits in the Late Permian lower Beaufort Group (Adelaide
Subgroup) and Late Triassic Molteno and Elliot Formations within
the main Karoo
Sandstone-hosted Uranium
The sandstone-hosted deposits cluster into a province, the Karoo Uranium Province, which lies between Laingsburg, Cradock and Bloemfontein over parts of the Adelaide Subgroup, and also includes a smaller, crescent-shaped satellite region between Clocolan and Harrismith over the Molteno and Elliot formations (Figure 1). The ore bodies are normally about 1 m thick, but attain 7 m in places and, where vertically stacked, have a combined thickness of 20 m (Cole, 1998). They are several hundred metres long, up to 200 m in width and are elongated along the palaeochannel thalweg within the lower portion of the enclosing fluvial sandstone body. The thickest sandstones host the larger ore bodies and these composite sandstones are up to 70 m thick in the Adelaide Subgroup and up to 40 m thick in the Molteno and Elliot Formations. The sandstone bodies represent meandering river and sheet flood deposits in the case of the Adelaide Subgroup, and braided and meandering deposits in the case of the Molteno Formation, and meandering and sheet flood deposits in the case of the Elliot Formation (Le Roux, 1990; Cole and Wipplinger, 2001).
The sandstone bodies
are interbedded with dark greenish grey, dark greyish red and maroon
mudstone and subordinate siltstone, which is volumetrically more
abundant in the Adelaide Subgroup and Elliot Formation and approximately
equally abundant to sandstone in the Molteno Formation. Calcareous
nodules and layers are common in the mudstone and sparse sandstone-filled
desiccation cracks are present. The mudstone represents deposition
in a flood-
Uranium in the ore
bodies is hosted by the minerals coffinite and less abundant uraninite.
The sulphides molybdenite, pyrite, arsenopyrite and chalcopyrite
are commonly present with concentrations of the former being sufficiently
high in the Adelaide Subgroup in the southwestern part of the main
Karoo
Volcanic ash derived
from a magmatic arc situated in southern South America, inboard
of a subduction zone descending beneath southwestern Gondwanaland,
also provided a source of uranium. The restriction of molybdenum
to the southwestern part of the main Karoo
Early diagenetic
processes are inferred from uranium minerals filling undeformed
cell structures in fossilised wood fragments and a matrix-supported
fabric of calcite-cemented ore, which is explained by expansive
growth of calcite cement in unconsolidated sand. The presence of
calcite suggests that the uranium was transported in solution as
uranyl carbonate complexes. These solutions moved from the flood
Total identified
resources in the Karoo Uranium Province are presently 32,832 metric
tons U with 95 per cent being hosted by the Adelaide Subgroup (OECD/IAEA,
2008). Ore bodies generally contain less than 1000 t U in situ,
but in the Adelaide Subgroup in the southwestern part of the main
Karoo
Coal-hosted Uranium
Uranium is hosted
by coal in the Late Permian, uppermost part of the Hammanskraal
Formation within the Springbok Flats
A lacustrine environment prevailed during deposition of the Coal Zone with suspension-transported mud in low-energy fluvial systems and windblown dust being the main sources of clastic sediment within the Coal Zone (Christie, 1989). A predominance of vitrinite in the coal has been ascribed to peat accumulation in a permanently waterlogged swamp, a characteristic of lacustrine settings (Falcon, 1986). The Coal Zone is conformably overlaid by up to 65 m of grey and red variegated mudstone and sparse fine-grained sandstone of the Beaufort Group, which represent a Late Permian alluvial plain environment. This unit, as well as the underlying units, are truncated unconformably by conglomerate and medium- to coarse-grained sandstone of the Late Triassic Molteno Formation (maximum thickness 43 m), which oversteps onto Precambrian bedrock on the shoulders of palaeovalleys and onto horst blocks that were uplifted during the Early to Middle Triassic. A fluvial, possibly braided river palaeoenvironment is indicated (Roberts, 1992). The Molteno Formation is overlaid by the Late Triassic to Early Jurassic Elliot, Clarens and Letaba formations, which respectively comprise red mudstone with subordinate fine- to coarse-grained sandstone (alluvial plain), fine-grained, well-sorted quartzose sandstone (desert) and amygdaloidal basaltic lava (volcanic flood basalt). These units combined have a maximum thickness of 800 m (Roberts, 1992).
Uranium is concentrated
in the upper part of the Coal Zone over a vertical interval of
1 m, but in the vicinity of bedrock in the form of Bushveld Complex
granite on the flanks and shoulders of palaeovalleys, the entire
Coal Zone is uraniferous (Christie, 1989). Only the Coal Zone in
the central and northeastern part of the
The uranium was probably derived
from granite of the Bushveld Complex that underlies most of the
Springbok Flats
Discussion
Uranium deposits
in the Karoo Supergroup are confined to fluvially-deposited sandstones
in the Adelaide Subgroup, the Molteno Formation and the Elliot
Formation within the main Karoo
Neither the sandstone-
nor coal-hosted deposits have been mined, but given the significant
increase in the price of uranium over the past five years, they
could become economically-viable and this is supported by renewed
exploration including feasibility studies, which are currently
being conducted. A consideration of ore body thickness and overburden
depth indicates that the sandstone-hosted deposits would have to
be mined using opencast and in situ methods and the coal-hosted
deposits by in situ methods. The sandstone-hosted uranium
deposits containing the by-product molybdenum in the southwestern
part of the main Karoo
References
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Cole, D.I., 1998, Uranium in The Mineral Resources of South Africa (M.G.C. Wilson and C.R. Anhaeusser, eds.), Handbook, Council for Geoscience, v. 16, p. 642-658.
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Beaufort Group in the main Karoo
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