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Conference Proceedings

ICAM 2008 - Ninth International Congress for Applied Mineralogy

Conference Proceedings

ICAM 2008 - Ninth International Congress for Applied Mineralogy

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Rare Earth Elements (REE) in Banded Iron Formations - Link Between Geochemistry and Mineralogy

In this study the light sparse phase search (SPL_Lt) mode on the Mineral Liberation Analyser (MLA) was successfully used to identify and quantify the abundance of rare earth element (REE) phosphates in Precambrian iron formations. Monazite (light REE phosphate) and xenotime (Y and heavy REE phosphate) are identified and data from the MLA combined with the mineral chemistry of the two minerals are used to calculate and model the expected REE concentration and distribution in these two REE phosphates. The REE phosphates account for up to 31 per cent of the REEs in the banded iron formations (BIFs) and excellent correspondence is observed between the modelled REE patterns and the whole rock geochemical data available for the same samples. Except for quantifying the mineral weights, the sparse phase search also allows for the localisation of REE phosphate grains and the observation of their association with other minerals using backscatter electron (BSE) imaging. These observations are used to conclude that the REE phosphates were most likely of diagenetic origin, with REEs and phosphate remobilised from primary chemical precipitates._x000D_
It is demonstrated that automated mineralogical techniques can be used to qualitatively and quantitatively describe the influence of a rock's trace mineralogy on its geochemistry.
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  • Published: 2008
  • PDF Size: 0.488 Mb.
  • Unique ID: P200808092

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