4.3 Article

Geological and geochronological evidence for the effect of Paleogene and Miocene uplift of the Northern Ordos Basin on the formation of the Dongsheng uranium district, China

Journal

JOURNAL OF GEODYNAMICS
Volume 114, Issue -, Pages 1-18

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jog.2017.11.010

Keywords

U-Pb dating; Dongsheng uranium district; Paleogene and Miocene uplift of Northern; Ordos Basin; Sandstone type uranium deposit

Funding

  1. CNNC [Geo-LTD-1601-2]
  2. National 973 Program of China [2015CB453004]
  3. Natural Science Foundation for the Youth of China [41602080]

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The Dongsheng uranium district, located in the northern part of the Ordos Basin, contains the largest known sandstone-hosted uranium deposit in China. This district contains (from west to east) the Daying, Nalinggou, and Dongsheng uranium deposits that host tens of thousands of metric tonnes of estimated recoverable uranium resources at an average grade of 0.05% U. These uranium orebodies are generally hosted by the lower member of the Zhiluo Formation and are dominantly roll or tabular in shape. The uranium deposits in this district formed during two stages of mineralization (as evidenced by U-Pb dating) that occurred at 65-60 and 25 Ma. Both stages generated coffinite, pitchblende, anatase, pyrite, and quartz, with or without sericite, chlorite, calcite, fluorite, and hematite. The post-Late Cretaceous uplift of the Northern Ordos Basin exposed the northern margins of the Zhiluo Formation within the Hetao depression at 65-60 Ma, introducing groundwater into the formation and generating the first stage of uranium mineralization. The Oligocene (similar to 25 Ma) uplift of this northern margin exposed either the entirety of the southern flank of the Hetao depression or only the elastic sedimentary part of this region, causing a second gravitational influx of groundwater into the Zhiluo Formation and forming the second stage of uranium mineralization.

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