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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
11

Depósito Metamórfico-Hidrotermal de U-ETR Mary Kathleen, Noroeste de Queensland, Austrália = uma investigação baseada em assinaturas hiperespectrais e aeroradiométricas / New insights on the Mary Kathleen Metamorphic-Hydrothermal U-REE Deposit, Northwest Queensland, Austratlia : an approach based on hyperspectral and airbone gamma-ray signatures

Salles, Rodrigo dos Reis 16 August 2018 (has links)
Orientadores: Carlos Roberto de Souza Filho, Thomas John Cudahy / Dissertação (mestrado) - Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Instituto de Geociências / Made available in DSpace on 2018-08-16T19:08:54Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 Salles_RodrigodosReis_M.pdf: 29354186 bytes, checksum: cd94ec7b06a8ec3077ab99b2519adafe (MD5) Previous issue date: 2010 / Resumo: O depósito metamórfico-hidrotermal de U-ETR Mary Kathleen, localiza-se à NW de Queensland, Austrália e está inserido na Província Metamórfica Mount Isa. Os litotipos predominantes nessa região compreendem rochas sedimentares (calcários, folhelhos e etc.), rochas vulcânicas (riolitos, basaltos, dacitos e etc.) e, subordinadamente, rochas granitóides (granodiorito, leucogranito porfirítico e etc.), metamorfisadas entre as fácies xisto-verde à anfibolito. O depósito Mary Kathleen (1550 Ma), atualmente exaurido, ocorre associado a skarns enriquecidos em U-ETR. A área de estudo contém ainda várias ocorrências de U com expressivas concentrações, além dos prospectos uraníferos Rita e Elaine Dorothy. Esta tipologia de depósito distingue-se dos principais depósitos mundiais de U pela ocorrência de alterações do tipo cálcio-silicática, granatização e metassomatismo de contato. Para tanto, foram necessárias condições físico-químicas especiais impostas pela instalação de intrusões graníticas de composição intermediária e ácida sobre calcário impuro, exatamente o caso da Mina Mary Kathleen. No presente estudo, são investigadas as assinaturas radiométricas regionais e as assinaturas hiperespectrais associadas aos minerais vetores da mineralização uranífera. No primeiro capítulo, dois métodos e técnicas de manipulação e integração de dados são comparados, com o objetivo de compilar mapas preditivos visando proporcionar subsídios adicionais à prospecção uranífera regional. Os mapas compilados pela abordagem Geoestatística foram fundamentados na análise das variáveis quanto a sua posição e variabilidade. O método baseado em Lógica Fuzzy reuniu mapas auto-explicativos ainda não experimentados na pesquisa mineral para a commodity U. Nesta conjuntura, áreas com alto potencial prospectivo foram evidenciadas a partir da integração dos dados aeroradiométricos. No segundo capítulo, imagens adquiridas pelo sensor hiperespectral HyMap foram processadas segundo um conjunto de métodos para extração de informações mineralógicas de detalhe. O principal resultado deste estudo foi a determinação das assinaturas hiperespectrais dos minerais satélites da Mina Mary Kathleen. Parte desta associação mineral consiste de minerais passíveis de detecção remota como a andradita, o epidoto, a hornblenda, a calcita e a escapolita. A análise espectral revelou ainda outros minerais tais como, goethita, caulinita e montmorillonita nas proximidades e frente de lavra da mina. Os cartogramas de abundância mineral, resultantes dos métodos de classificação hiperespectral Spectral Angle Mapper (SAM) e Mixture Tuned Matched Filtering (MTMF) foram combinados no espaço de cores RGB. Esta estratégia permitiu delinear áreas de domínio e mistura de minerais com grande aplicabilidade na pesquisa mineral uranífera / Abstract: The Mary Kathleen Metamorphic-Hydrothermal U-REE Deposit of northwest Queensland, Australia is inserted in the Mount Isa Metamorphic Province. The predominant rock types in the study area are represented by sedimentary rocks (limestone, shales, etc.), volcanics rocks (rhyolite, basalt, dacite, etc.) and subordinate intrusive rocks (granodiorite, porphyritic leucogranito, etc.) metamorphosed in green schist to amphibolites facies conditions. This Mary Kathleen deposit (1550 Ma), now depleted, is associated with skarns enriched in U-REE. Nevertheless, there are U occurrences with significant concentrations; also there are two prospectus uraniferous, Rita and Elaine Dorothy. This deposit type differs from the major world U deposits because of the paragenesis calc-silicates, garnetization phase and contact metasomatism. Thus, it is necessary physicochemical conditions imposed by granitic intrusions of intermediate and acid compositions upon impure limestone, as the case of Mary Kathleen Mine. In this study, we investigate the regional airborne radiometric and hyperspectral signatures associated with mineral vectors of uranium mineralization. In the first chapter, we compared two methods and techniques for handling and integration data to build predictive maps to support uranium mineral exploration. The maps compiled by the first technique were based on statistical analysis of the variables of position and variability. While the second method, based in Fuzzy Logic, compiled self-explanatory maps untried in mineral exploration for the commodity U. At this juncture, prospective areas with high potential were evidenced from the data integration of airborne gamma-ray. The second chapter, discuss the methods and techniques for hyperspectral remote sensing and digital image processing for airborne scanner HyMap image. The goal of this study was the analysis of hyperspectral signatures of calc-silicate paragenesis of Mary Kathleen Mine exposed by HyMap spectrum. Part of this mineral association consists of allanita, uraninite, andradite, epidote, hornblende, calcite and scapolite. Also, the spectra nalysis revealed occurrence of minerals such as goethite, kaolinite and montmorillonite nearby mining an open pit mine. The maps on mineral abundance resulting from the methods of hyperspectral classification of Spectral Angle Mapper (SAM) e Mixture Tuned Matched Filtering (MTMF), after compile mineral abundance maps were combined in RGB color space. This strategy allowed enhancing areas of domain and mineral mix with great applicability to uranium mineral exploration / Mestrado / Geologia e Recursos Naturais / Mestre em Geociências
12

Use of remote sensing and GIS in a risk assessment of gold and uranium mine residue deposits and identification of vulnerable land use

Sutton, Malcolm William 29 April 2013 (has links)
A research report submitted to the Faculty of Science, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Science in Environmental Science Johannesburg, November 2012. / Acid rock drainage (ARD) and dust are potential consequences of gold and uranium mine residue deposits (MRDs) on the Witwatersrand basin. Urbanisation has taken place around mines and, with the curtailing of mining activities and clearing of land previously covered by MRDs, there is pressure to use this land for residential, industrial and agricultural purposes. However, mining companies historically were not required to provide pollution control measures and there is evidence for contamination of land and water. Thus, there is a need to prioritise contamination sources for mitigation and to understand the extent of contamination and potential risks associated with different categories of land-use on mining land. The aim of my study was to conduct a first-order risk assessment to aid in identifying vulnerable land use in the vicinity of gold and uranium mining, and prioritising MRDs, including footprints, for mitigation. To achieve this I constructed a Geographical Information System (GIS) using publicly available spatial data, and then tested the usefulness of historical aerial photographs and remote sensing imagery for mapping MRDs and impacts of MRD origin under Highveld conditions (i.e. a seasonal climate with summer rainfall and annual evapotranspiration of >2.5 times mean annual precipitation). The Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality (EMM; 1923 km2) is an area of extensive historical mining with major urbanisation, while retaining areas for agricultural land use; thus it was selected as a representative study site. I used a numerical rating scheme, which combined a number of parameters in two separate stages to calculate a risk index. The first stage involved the classification of hazards associated with MRDs while the second involved an assessment of land use vulnerability based on exposure pathways and proximity. Historical aerial photographs (1938, 1964 and 2003) and the Chamber of Mines (CoM) Dump Indexes were used to identify and classify MRDs in terms of basic geotechnical properties, current status and historical failure. Multi-spectral data, acquired over two years (2002 and 2003) in two seasons (spring and summer) by the TERRA satellite’s Advanced Spaceborne Thermal Emission and Reflection Radiometer (ASTER) sensor, were used to compile thematic images, indicating potential contamination of surrounding land. It was intended that a zone of influence could be distinguished for each MRD enabling me to rate the hazard severity. The thematic images I selected included primary minerals (pyrophyllite and chlorite), secondary minerals (copiapite and jarosite), an indicator of uranium-bearing ore (referred to as mincrust) and the normalised difference vegetation index (NDVI). These minerals were chosen as potential indicators of different transport routes of contaminants and I tested their associations with different features and land use. I also tested for seasonal differences in the detection of these minerals, and used NDVI to examine the masking effect of active vegetation. I found GIS to be well suited for combining the various forms of spatial data and providing information about MRDs, aqueous pathways, proximity to vulnerable land uses and impacted areas. However, I found that the potential severity of the hazards posed by each MRD, as indicated by a zone of influence, could not be determined from aerial photographs and ASTER alone. I therefore utilised the findings expressed in the literature survey to assign ratings for the different classes of MRDs. The vulnerability assessment was also supplemented by literature review to rate land uses based on human exposure pathways. I determined that MRDs (including footprints) cover 4.1% of EMM, with slimes dams, totalling 3.5%, occupying the majority of this area. I found that 64% of slimes dams had failed prior to 2003 and I plotted a further 0.6% of EMM covered by visible mine residue spillage. Fifty three percent of MRDs were situated within 100 m of drainage lines or old wetlands, while 52% of these (i.e. 27% of the total) had been constructed in the watercourse. I also found that 15% were constructed on dolomites. Informal settlements were located on or bordering 6% of MRDs, with 41% of MRDs within 1 000 m. Eighty eight percent of MRDs were found within 1 000 m of formal residential areas, 71% within 500 m, and formal settlements were located on or bordering 5% of MRDs. Twenty three percent of MRDs were located within 500 m of agricultural land, while 35% were within 1 000 m; and industrial land use was on 9% of MRDs (footprints), with 40% of MRDs being within 500 m of industrial areas and 61% within 1 000 m I found that chlorite did not provide a ‘signature’ of gold and uranium mine residue, whereas the other four minerals did. I also found that, of the two seasons examined (spring and summer), the best time to take an ASTER image to detect mineral signatures of gold and uranium mine contamination is after a few dry days following the first spring rains. For this reason, I used the ASTER taken in late October (spring) 2003 to examine associations with pathways and land use. I found more pyrophyllite and copiapite on industrial and business land use than background, which I suggest is associated with the settling of windborne dust on large and flat roofs; although, in the case of copiapite this could be related to the oxidation of settled wind blown pyrite material. I found jarosite to be a reliable indicator of mine residue, which, together with mincrust, helped me identify contamination in former agricultural holdings, which are now a township. Although, chemically undefined, mincrust was a useful indicator of contamination, as I found it to be reliably detected on MRDs (including footprints), mine residue spillage, wetlands and other contaminated sites, and absent from known uncontaminated sites. Furthermore, it was not necessarily masked by active vegetation, whereas copiapite, jarosite and pyrophyllite were. Mincrust was also detected on irrigated agricultural land with an odds ratio of between 10 to 36 times greater than for rain-fed. Consequently, the most likely pathway for mincrust is the aqueous. The mincrust signature, together with historical aerial photographs, also assisted me to identify historical mining along Black Reef outcrops, through detection in a wetland upstream of known mining activities. The culmination of my study was a risk class and index for MRDs from which ‘risk maps’ were produced. These maps provide a guide to the level of risk posed by each MRD to the surrounding land use. Of the total 287 MRDs (including footprints) identified in the EMM, 50% were classified lower-risk; 40% medium-risk; 10% higher-risk and 0% as much higher risk. The lower-risk MRDs were predominantly rock dumps, whereas the higher-risk MRDs were slimes dams. The findings from my study will contribute to meaningful recommendations for future land use and enable mining companies, landowners, developers and government to allocate their resources judiciously (i.e. appropriate to the level of risk). The results of this study have been published as: Sutton, M.W., Weiersbye, I.M., Galpin, J.S and Heller, D., 2006. A GIS-based history of gold mine residue deposits and risk assessment of post-mining land uses on the Witwatersrand Basin, South Africa. In: A. B. Fourie and M. Tibbett (eds.), Mine Closure 2006: Proceedings of the 1st International Seminar on Mine Closure, Perth, ISBN: 0-9756756-6-4, pp. 667–678 (Appendix I). Sutton, M.W. and Weiersbye, I.M., 2007. South African legislation pertinent to gold mine closure and residual risk. In: A.B. Fourie, M. Tibbett and J. Wiertz (eds.), Mine Closure 2007: Proceedings of the 2nd International Seminar on Mine Closure, Santiago, ISBN: 978-0-9804185-0-7, pp. 89–102 (Appendix II). Sutton, M.W. and Weiersbye, I.M., 2008. Land use after mine closure – Risk assessment of gold and uranium mine residue deposits on the eastern Witwatersrand, South Africa. In: A.B. Fourie, M. Tibbett, I.M. Weiersbye and P.J. Dye (eds.), Mine Closure 2008: Proceedings of the 3rd International Seminar on Mine Closure, Johannesburg, ISBN: 978-0-9804185-6-9, pp. 363–374 (Appendix III).
13

The uranium mining industry of the Bancroft area, an environmental history and heritage assessment

Proulx, Michèle January 1997 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.

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