Basement-hosted uranium deposits of the Patterson Lake corridor are located on the southwestern margin of the Athabasca Basin in atypical hosts: altered and metamorphosed granite, granodiorite, and ultramafic to mafic rocks. Fluid inclusions record incursion of
two fluids, NaCl- and CaCl2-dominant, at temperatures up to 250°C and approximately 1 km into the basement during episodic brittle reactivation of high-strain-ductile to brittle-ductile structures, in particular late west- and north-northwest-striking brittle conjugate faults that crosscut the
Athabasca sandstone. Isotopic data from pyrite and tourmaline record basinal fluid-rock interactions under fluctuating pressure and oxidizing to reducing conditions. New 3-D geophysical modelling illustrates linkages between the surface architecture and lower crust to mantle and influence of the
Clearwater Domain granitic intrusions on the ore systems. High radiogenic heat production from these intrusions and other ca. 1.8 Ga felsic intrusions contributed to a prolonged, elevated geothermal gradient under the Proterozoic basins that permitted shallow (less than 3 km) depths of
mineralization.
This report summarizes the 2017 field investigations and on-going research in the Patterson Lake corridor, northwestern Saskatchewan, an area hosting recently discovered, high-grade uranium deposits. 2017 activities included acquisition and release of a new
aeromagnetic survey and derivative map products, sampling and structural measurements on industry drill core. Samples will be analyzed for magnetization, petrographic, geochronologic, fluid inclusion and stable isotopes. Together these analyses will provide information on the ore genesis, alteration
and structural reactivation history of the region to inform on-going exploration and challenge existing ore deposit models.
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.