Structural Evolution And Related Implications For Uranium Mineralization In The Patterson Lake Corridor, Southwestern Athabasca Basin, Saskatchewan, Canada

GEOCHEMISTRY-EXPLORATION ENVIRONMENT ANALYSIS(2021)

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摘要
The Patterson Lake corridor is situated along the SW margin of the Athabasca Basin and contains several basement-hosted uranium deposits and prospects. Drill core investigations during this study have determined that granite, granodiorite, mafic and alkali intrusive basement rocks are entrained in a deep-seated NE-striking subvertical heterogeneous high-strain zone defined by anastomosing ductile to semi-brittle shears and brittle faults. The earliest phases of ductile deformation (D-1/D-2), linked with Taltson (1.94-1.92 Ga) orogenesis, involved interference between early fold sets (F-1/F-2) and development of an associated ductile transposition foliation (S-1/S-2). During subsequent Snowbird (c. 1.91-1.90 Ga) tectonism, this composite foliation was re-folded (D-3) by NE-trending buckle-style folds (F-3), including a regional fold centred on the Clearwater aeromagnetic high. In continuum with D-3, a network of dextral-reverse chloritic-graphitic shears, with C-S geometry, formed initially (D-4a) and progressed to more discrete, spaced semi-brittle structures (D-4b; c. 1.900-1.819 Ga). Basin development (D-5a; 更多
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关键词
unconformity-related uranium, Athabasca Basin, polydeformation, reactivation, shear, fault
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