Of detritals, derivatives and determination ? an example of detrital iron discovery
A. L. Butt, P. J. Hawke and M. Flis
ASEG Extended Abstracts
2001(1) 1 - 4
Published: 2001
Abstract
The Hamersley Basin of Western Australia holds significant tonnages of detrital iron deposits. Formed by a cyclic weathering and eroding sequence of nominally barren banded iron formation, they may form rich proximal accumulations of iron cemented gravels distal from any obvious hard-rock iron mineralisation. While generally small, they nonetheless represent excellent economic targets as they are near surface and easy to mine. The relatively high density of iron detritals, as compared with their sedimentary hosts, makes the gravity method the primary method of exploring for these blind deposits. Identification of possible trap sites is used as a precursor to gravity surveying, with magnetics used as an ancillary method prior to drilling. Application of the gravity method in this terrain is not straightforward. Detrital trap sites are best developed next to the spectacular cliffs that form the range fronts to the Hamersley Ranges. Precise terrain corrections and use of first vertical derivatives are routinely applied to gravity data in an effort to map every possible gravity high that may reflect the presence of a detrital accumulation. Extensions to Hamersley Iron Pty. Limited?s BS2D deposit were discovered by the routine application of gravity. It has been used to create a model by which exploration for detrital deposits continue to the present day.https://doi.org/10.1071/ASEG2001ab013
© ASEG 2001