IC 9103 Uranium Occurrences In The Northern Darby Mountains, Seward Peninsula, AK

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Jeffrey Y. Foley
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
33
File Size:
14014 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1986

Abstract

In 1980, the Bureau of Mines investigated the northern Darby Mountains on the Seward Peninsula, AK, for radioactive mineral deposits. Uranium is concentrated in silicified shear zones in biotite quartz monzonite of the Darby pluton. The shear zones are best exposed in steep, narrow, avalanche gullies; they are characterized by radiometric anomalies and by uranium and thorium geochemical anomalies. Radiometric and geochemical anomalies are also found over altered biotite quartz monzonite where there are no visible shear zones. The radiometric and uranium anomalies are often spatially, but apparently not genetically, associated with alkaline mafic and felsic dikes. Similar geochemical and radiometric anomalies over discolored altered zones and geochemical anomalies in sediments downstream from the altered zones indicate that additional areas may also be favorable targets for uranium deposits. Analyses of panned, heavy mineral concentrates show no significant concentrations of uranium or thorium in resistant heavy minerals. This indicates that radioactive elements in the Darby pluton are concentrated in soluble, nonresistant minerals that may constitute a recoverable uranium resource.
Citation

APA: Jeffrey Y. Foley  (1986)  IC 9103 Uranium Occurrences In The Northern Darby Mountains, Seward Peninsula, AK

MLA: Jeffrey Y. Foley IC 9103 Uranium Occurrences In The Northern Darby Mountains, Seward Peninsula, AK. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1986.

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