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Published July 28, 2017 | public
Report

Uranium in granites from the Southwestern United States: actinide parent-daughter systems, sites and mobilization. First year report

Abstract

Some of the principal findings of the study on the Lawler Peak Granite are: the granite is dated precisely by this work at 1411 ± 3 m.y., confirming its synchroneity with a great regional terrane of granites. Uranium is presently 8-10 times crustal abundance and thorium 2-3 times in this granite. Uranium is found to be enriched in at least eight, possibly ten, primary igneous mineral species over the whole-rock values. Individual mineral species show distinct levels in, and characteristics ranges of, uranium concentration. It appears that in a uraniferous granite such as this, conventional accuracy mineral suites probably cannot account for most of the uranium in the rock, and more rare, high U-concentration phases also are present and are significant uranium hosts. It appears that at least two different geological episodes have contributed to the disturbance of the U-Th-Pb isotope systems. Studies of various sites for transient dispersal of uranium, thorium, and radiogenic lead isotopes indicate a non-uniform dispersal of these components. It appears that the bulk rock has lost at least 24 percent of its original uranium endowment, accepting limited or no radiogenic lead or thorium migration from the sample.

Additional Information

Prepared for the U.S. Department of Energy, Assistant Secretary for Resource Applications, Grand Junction Office, Colorado, under Contract No. DE-AC13-76GJ01664, and Bendix Field Engineering Corporation Subcontract No. 79-384-E.

Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
January 13, 2024