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Progress report on geologic studies of the Ranger orebodies, Northern Territory, Australia

January 1, 1982

The Ranger No. 1 and No. 3 orebodies contain about 124,000 tonnes U3O8 in highly chloritized metasediments of the lower Proterozoic Cahill Formation within about 500 m of the projected sub-Kombolgie Formation unconformity. In both orebodies, oxidized and reduced uranium minerals occur chiefly in quartzose schists that have highly variable amounts of muscovite, sericite, and chlorite. The effects of several periods of alteration are pervasive in the vicinity of orebodies where biotite and garnet are altered to chlorite, and feldspars to white mica or chlorite. Oxidized uranium minerals, associated with earthy iron oxides, occur from the surface to a depth of about 60 m. Below the oxidized zone, uranium occurs chiefly as uraninite and pitchblende disseminated through thick sections of quartz-chlorite-muscovite schist and has no apparent association with graphite or sulfides. In fact, graphite is rare and sulfides are generally low in abundance (

Publication Year 1982
Title Progress report on geologic studies of the Ranger orebodies, Northern Territory, Australia
DOI 10.3133/ofr82936
Authors J. T. Nash, David Frishman
Publication Type Report
Publication Subtype USGS Numbered Series
Series Title Open-File Report
Series Number 82-936
Index ID ofr82936
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
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