西非喀麦隆前寒武纪矿物带的两个对比铁矿床

C. E. Suh, A. Cabral, E. Shemang, L. Mbinkar, G. Mboudou
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引用次数: 39

摘要

首次详细描述了喀麦隆前寒武纪矿物带内的两个铁矿床:封闭在富铁橄榄岩中的太古宙Metzimevin替代铁矿床和元古代花岗岩为主、剪切带相关的Mayo Binka磁铁矿床。在梅茨梅文矿床中,石英被腐蚀,微板状赤铁矿覆印马氏织构赤铁矿。梅奥宾卡块状磁铁矿脉显示出磁铁矿变形(破裂和微角化)和反射赤铁矿过度生长(机械孪晶和起伏消光)的证据。磁铁矿部分被赤铁矿(针铁矿)和针铁矿取代。两个矿床的矿石Fe2O3总量均>88%,SiO2、Al2O3、MgO、CaO、P2O5和TiO2等污染物含量较低。它们也缺乏Cu、Pb、Zn、V、Cr和Ni。梅茨梅文块状赤铁矿相对富铁橄榄石具有明显的轻稀土元素亏缺特征。认为梅茨梅文铁矿是由橄榄石原矿的脉石矿物下生浸出并进一步赤铁矿化的结果。梅奥宾卡块状磁铁矿成因尚不清楚,但在空间上与新元古代花岗质岩石有关。这些数据可以将这些鲜为人知但具有潜在经济价值的铁矿与世界上一些调查得更好的铁矿进行比较,并对目前正在喀麦隆和中非分区域进行的铁矿石勘探工作有用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Two Contrasting Iron Deposits in the Precambrian Mineral Belt of Cameroon, West Africa
Two iron deposits within the Precambrian mineral belt of Cameroon are described in detail for the first time: the Archean Metzimevin replacement iron deposit enclosed in Fe-enriched itabirite, and the Proterozoic granite-hosted, shear zone-related Mayo Binka magnetite deposit. In the Metzimevin deposit, quartz is corroded and microplaty hematite overprints martite-textured hematite. The Mayo Binka massive magnetite veins show evidence of deformation in magnetite (fracturing and microbrecciation) and in overgrowths of specular hematite (mechanical twinning and undulating extinction). The magnetite is partially replaced by hematite (martitization) and goethite. Ores from both deposits have >88% total Fe2O3 and low contents of contaminants such as SiO2, Al2O3, MgO, CaO, P2O5, and TiO2. They are also poor in Cu, Pb, Zn, V, Cr, and Ni. The Metzimevin massive hematite is characterized by an accentuated light rare earth element depletion relative to the Fe-enriched itabirite. It is suggested that the Metzimevin iron deposit is the result of hypogene leaching of gangue minerals from, and further hematitization of, an itabirite protore. Although the genesis of the Mayo Binka massive magnetite is unclear, it is spatially related to Neoproterozoic granitic rocks. The data allow some comparison of these little known, but potentially economic iron deposits, with some of the world’s better investigated deposits, and are useful to the exploration efforts for iron ore currently underway in Cameroon and the Central African subregion.
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