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Ilmenite, magnetite and chromite beach placers from south Maharashtra, central west coast of India

DRS at CSIR-National Institute of Oceanography

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Title Ilmenite, magnetite and chromite beach placers from south Maharashtra, central west coast of India
 
Creator Gujar, A.R.
Ambre, N.V.
Mislankar, P.G.
Iyer, S.D.
 
Subject ilmenite
magnetite
heavy mineral
placer deposits
 
Description The heavy mineral placer deposits of the coastal sediments in south Maharashtra stretch for 12.5 km from Pirwadi in the north to Talashil in the south. The area is a sand bar represented by a narrow submergent coastal plain lying between the Achara and Gad Rivers. The sediments in the area are mainly sands which are moderately well sorted to well sorted. The heavy mineral concentration in the surficial sediments ranges between 0.69 and 98.32 wt % (28.73 wt % in average). The heavy mineral concentration shows an increasing trend from north to south. The heavy mineral suite consists predominantly of opaque minerals (ilmenite, magnetite and chromite), garnet, pyroxene, amphibole, zircon, tourmaline, rutile, staurolite, etc. Ilmenite grains are fresh whereas magnetite grains show the effect of weathering and alteration. The chromite grains are rounded to sub-rounded with alteration at the margin of the grains. The surficial textures of the opaque minerals show mechanical breaking that indicates limited distance of transportation. Ilmenite has TiO sub(2) in the range between 40.04 and 46.6 wt %. Based on ore microscopy studies, the magnetite grains appear to be of two types: pure magnetite and titano-magnetite. Compositionally, the total magnetite fractions have Fe sub(2)O sub(3) between 32 and 46 wt %, FeO between 19.0 and 25 wt % and TiO sub(2) between 14.3 and 23.9 wt %. The chromite grains are an admixture of two varieties, ferro-chromite and magnesio-chromite. The chromite grains have 32.06-47.5 wt % of Cr sub(2) O sub(3) with total iron between 23.86 wt % (4.73 % Fe sub(2) O sub(3) and 19.13% FeO) and 27.89 wt % (4.36 % Fe sub(2) O sub(3) and 23.53 % FeO) and MgO between 12 and 40 wt %. The observed variations in the distribution of heavy minerals in the area are due to differences in the sediment supply, their specific gravity and oceanographic processes all of which result in a selective sorting of the sediments. The observed mineral assemblages of transparent heavy minerals (pyroxene, amphibole, tourmaline, kyanite, garnet, zircon and olivine) are suggestive of their derivation from a heterogeneous provenance comprising of igneous rocks, high grade metamorphic rocks and reworked Kaladgi sediments. The chromite grains appear to have been derived from ultrabasic rocks present in the upper reaches of the Gad River. The inferred reserves of ilmenite, magnetite and chromite are 0.175, 0.395 and 0.032 million tons, respectively.
 
Date 2010-03-09T11:43:50Z
2010-03-09T11:43:50Z
2010
 
Type Journal Article
 
Identifier Resource Geology, vol.60(1); 71-86
http://drs.nio.org/drs/handle/2264/3566
 
Language en
 
Rights © 2010 The Authors.
Journal compilation © 2010 The Society of Resource Geology
 
Publisher The Society of Resource Geology