In the Cree Lake Zone of northern Saskatchewan, reworked Archean orthogneisses are overlain by a highly deformed supracrustal sequence, the Paleoproterozoic Wollaston Group. This package of rocks was deformed and metamorphosed during the ca. 1.8 Ga continentcontinent collision of the Trans-Hudson Orogen (THO), forming the Wollaston foldthrust belt that underlies the eastern Athabasca Basin. The Hudsonian structural, metamorphic, and magmatic evolution of the Wollaston fold-thrust belt in the eastern Athabasca area involved six major stages. (1) Early collisional stage, DP1 at 18601835 Ma, involved burial of Wollaston Group metasediments from surface to depths equivalent to 35vkbar (1 kbar = 100 MPa) by thrust-pile stacking or imbrication tectonics, prograde metamorphism with garnet growth and development of early leucosomes, and emplacement of ca. 1840 Ma grey granite suite. (2) Collisional stage, DP2a at 18351820 Ma, involved continued deeper burial of Wollaston Group metasediments along a prograde PTt (pressuretemperaturetime) path at depths equivalent to peak pressures of 69 kbar and approaching peak temperatures (750825 °C), mafic magma underplating in the lower crust, initiation of large-scale crustal melting, emplacement of 18351820 Ma tholeiitic to calc-alkaline intrusions, and initiation of strike-slip tectonics. (3) Oblique collisional stage, DP2b at 18201805 Ma, involved strong transpressional tectonics with NESW shearing and NWSE shortening, partitioned high-strain ductile flow, kilometre-scale fold development, initiation of exhumation, attainment of peak temperatures (750825 °C), and essentially isothermal decompression with decompressional melting and intrusion of the main pulse of leucogranites and granitic pegmatites. (4) Late oblique collisional stage, DP3 at 18051775 Ma, caused development of amphibolite-facies dextral strike-slip shear zones and retrograde movement of older shear zones. It included apparent rotation of the main shortening axis and development of accommodation features due to vertical uplift (i.e., extension). (5) Post-collisional stage, DP4 at 17751760 Ma, involved continued localized adjustments along an essentially isobaric cooling path and produced NNE-trending, sinistral, oblique-slip reverse faults with reactivation of older shear zones. (6) Late post-collisional stage, DP5, produced north- to northwest-trending sinistral faults, including the Tabbernor fault system. Extension and tectonic extrusion during DP4 and DP5 were significant and resulted in orogenic collapse and formation of the Athabasca Basin at ca. 17501680 Ma.
The genetic model for the giant unconformity-related uranium deposits of the Athabasca Basin is still being debated, with one of the main issues being the source of the uranium concentrated by Mesoproterozoic era (ca. 1.60-1.00 Ga) diagenetic-hydrothermal events at the interface between the Athabasca Basin and the underlying Archean/Paleoproterozoic basement rocks. Currently, accessory minerals like monazite, zircon, and/or apatite from the sedimentary basin and basement rocks are proposed as the primary uranium source for these high-grade uranium deposits. Numerous occurrences of U mineralization of Hudsonian age have been documented for decades all around the Athabasca Basin; however, so far these have not been regarded as viable U sources. Here, a systematic and detailed study of two areas of basement rocks near the eastern part of the Athabasca Basin is presented (i.e., the Way Lake property, lying outside the current margin of the basin, and the Moore Lakes property, currently covered by the basin). This study highlights the significant and widespread occurrence of Hudsonian (ca. 1.81-1.76 Ga) uranium oxide (UO2) mineralization in these zones. Two types of mineralization are identified and documented here: magmatic uranium oxides related to granitic pegmatites and leucogranites, which are more common, and high-temperature, vein-hosted uranium oxides, which have the highest grades. The two types were formed during the peak (1.82-1.81 Ga) and/or postthermal peak (1.81-1.72 Ga) events related to the evolution of the Trans-Hudson orogeny. The magmatic uranium oxides formed by partial melting of Wollaston Group metasedimentary rocks. The origin of the vein-type occurrences is unclear, but their high thorium and rare earth element (REE) contents suggest a high-temperature process associated with Ca and/or Na metasomatism. The uranium oxides are associated with other U-, Th-, and REEbearing accessory minerals like U-rich thorite, thorite, zircon, and/or monazite, adding to the exceptional U contents (100-2,460 ppm) of these UO2-bearing rocks (up to 200 times more primarily enriched in U than other basement or basin rock types). A 3-D model of a 1,300 × 630 × 200-m basement zone from the Way Lake property indicates that uraninite-bearing granitic pegmatites and leucogranites represent 7% of the total volume of crystalline rock. Within this rock volume are approximately 8,121 (assuming a mean U content of 250 ppm) to 16,242 (assuming a mean U content of 500 ppm) tonnes U. The U tonnage of this limited rock volume, contained mainly by the Hudsonian-age UO2, corresponds to between 4% (for McArthur River) and 103% (for Rabbit Lake) of the U tonnage of known unconformity-related U deposits of the basin.Some of the studied rock samples, even macroscopically fresh and located far away from any known unconformity-related U deposit, present clear evidence of alteration, including clay minerals, aluminophosphatesulfate (APS) minerals, and UO2 dissolution, indicating the percolation of the brines associated with the formation ...
Seismic-reflection techniques have been applied in several studies over the last 20 years as a uranium-exploration tool within the Athabasca Basin and have been utilized to provide the larger structural context for known uranium deposits within the basin. At the crustal scale, deposits within the eastern Athabasca Basin are shown to be associated with deep-seated shear zones that originated during Trans-Hudson orogeny and have subsequently been reactivated during and subsequent to deposition of the basin-fill sandstones. Seismic properties of the Athabasca sandstones and underlying basement have been determined through in situ borehole measurements. Reflectivity within the sandstones is generally weak. Seismically recognizable signatures are primarily associated with variations in fracture density, porosity, and degree of silicification. The basement unconformity and regolith, a prime target of exploration, is widely imaged as it is characterized by variable but generally distinct reflectivity. Results from the McArthur River mine site suggest that the spatial coincidence of seismically imaged high-velocity zones and deep-seated faults that offset the unconformity may be a more broadly applicable exploration targeting tool. Three-dimensional (3-D) seismic imaging near existing ore zones can define the local structural controls on the mineralization and point the way to new targets, thus leading to more efficient exploration drilling programs. Furthermore, seismically generated structural maps of the unconformity and rock competence properties may play a significant role at the outset of mine planning.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.