--> ABSTRACT: Diagenesis of Amorphous Organic Matter as an Essential Aspect of Genesis and Alteration of Tabular-Type Uranium-Vanadium Deposits, Colorado Plateau, by Charles S. Spirakis and Paula L. Hansley; #91038 (2010)

Datapages, Inc.Print this page

Diagenesis of Amorphous Organic Matter as an Essential Aspect of Genesis and Alteration of Tabular-Type Uranium-Vanadium Deposits, Colorado Plateau

Charles S. Spirakis, Paula L. Hansley

Organic matter was the key to the initial concentration of uranium and vanadium (during the sulfate reduction stage of early diagenesis) in all sandstone-hosted, tabular deposits in the Morrison Formation, Colorado Plateau. In deposits rich in amorphous organic matter, as are many in the Grants uranium region (GUR), diagenesis did not proceed beyond sulfate reduction. In contrast, in organic-poor, chlorite deposits of the Henry Mountains district, 13C- and 18O-enriched dolomites preserve evidence of a subsequent methanogenic stage. In these and similar organic-poor deposits in the Slick Rock district and in parts of the GUR, aluminosilicate dissolution (including a distinctive, organic-acid-induced etching of garnets) and growth of coarse-grained cof inite, albite, ankerite, and chlorite suggest diagenesis reached the organic acid stage. Temperature and thermal maturation indicators (vitrinite reflectance, type IIb chlorite, ordered illite/smectite, and fluid inclusion data) are consistent with temperatures of organic-acid stage diagenesis (~ 100°C). The localization of these alterations in and around organic-poor, clay-rich ore; the similarities in type and sequence of these alterations to the normal alteration of organic-bearing sediments; the alteration of iron-titanium oxides (attributed to the action of soluble organic complexes) around both organic-rich and organic-poor deposits; and the gradation from organic-rich to organic-poor, chlorite-rich deposits (in GUR) suggest that (1) amorphous organic matter was involved in th genesis of all of these deposits and (2) differences among deposits may reflect varying degrees of diagenesis of the organic matter.

AAPG Search and Discovery Article #91038©1987 AAPG Annual Convention, Los Angeles, California, June 7-10, 1987.