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The geochemistry of primary and weathered oil shale and coquina across the Julia Creek vanadium deposit (Queensland, Australia)
Authors:Stephen Edward Lewis  Robert A Henderson  Gerald R Dickens  Graham A Shields  Simon Coxhell
Institution:(1) School of Earth and Environmental Sciences, James Cook University, Townsville, Queensland, 4811, Australia;(2) Present address: Australian Centre for Tropical Freshwater Research, James Cook University, Townsville, Queensland, 4811, Australia;(3) Present address: Department of Earth Science, Rice University, Houston, TX 77005, USA;(4) Present address: Department of Earth Sciences, University College, London, WC1E 6BT, UK;(5) Fimiston Mining NL, West Perth, WA, 6005, Australia;(6) Present address: Matilda Zircon, Perth, WA, 6008, Australia
Abstract:A significant resource of vanadium and molybdenum exists near Julia Creek, Australia, where the middle Cretaceous organic-rich Toolebuc Formation lies between 0 and 25 m of the surface. We present and discuss a comprehensive geochemical study of the Toolebuc Formation and its enclosing stratigraphy near Julia Creek to understand this ore deposit. V and Mo contents in fresh facies are strongly associated with total organic carbon (TOC) contents, but not with Al or CaCO3; this suggests that V and Mo were originally concentrated in the organic fraction. However, chemical extractions using H2O2 indicate that Mo was originally concentrated in pyrite. The data also suggest that V was mobilised from organic matter during early diagenesis and became associated with clays as little V was extracted by H2O2 in the fresh samples. TOC contents in the Toolebuc Formation were removed during weathering, residually enriching trace metals including V and Mo, and as a result, the TOC relationship with V and Mo disintegrates. With weathering, both V and Mo predominantly became associated with iron oxide/hydroxide phases (and possibly other unidentified phases) as these elements in the weathered facies were highly soluble in the sodium citrate–sodium dithionite digestion. Large shale-hosted V and Mo deposits such as Julia Creek offer a potentially viable alternative to the currently mined magnetite-hosted deposits. A thorough understanding of the formation and host mineral phases for V and Mo of these shale deposits, however, is critical to ensure that these valuable metals can be feasibly extracted.
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