Geochemical exploration for gold in tropical soils: four contrasting case studies from West Africa

- Organization:
- The Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining
- Pages:
- 22
- File Size:
- 11038 KB
- Publication Date:
- Apr 1, 1996
Abstract
In the largely preserved laterite profiles at Syama mine, in the savanna region of southern Mali, element geochemistry in the mottled-clay horizon and below can be related directly back to the protolith, but above this, in the ferricrete and cuirasse horizons, the hypogene signature is much modified by pedogenic processes. In tropical rainforest terrains extensive remobilisation can result in wide but weak geochemical targets for gold and pathfinder elements. At the Hire concession in central Ivory Coast, intense recent alteration of the largely intact laterite sequences has modified soil-geochemical dispersion patterns extensively, producing Fe-rich nodular stone lines and obliterating previous patterns and features. Where the upper horizons of the laterite profile have been removed or reworked, as at the Senoufo concession in northern Ivory Coast (savanna) or the Kubi prospect in Ghana (rainforest), all soil horizons can be related directly to hypogene geochemistry. In these truncated profiles, gold and base metal anomalies are essentially those of the lower weathering profile and form narrow but strong dispersion haloes. A good understanding of the geochemical processes active in deeply weathered profiles is required if targets are to be recognised effectively
Citation
APA:
(1996) Geochemical exploration for gold in tropical soils: four contrasting case studies from West AfricaMLA: Geochemical exploration for gold in tropical soils: four contrasting case studies from West Africa. The Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining, 1996.