Abstract

Radioactive veins containing the rare-earth minerals monazite and bastnaesite are found in tension joints in Precambrian sandstone, granite, lavas and dykes on the eastern side of the alkaline Ilímaussaq intrusion in South Greenland. The veins were formed in several phases. First, small cracks were mineralized with hematite, fluorite, quartz and radioactive material. This was followed by emplacement of brown albititic veins in which albite and opaque material predominate, green veins with a high content of ægirine, white albititic veins, carbonate veins and finally quartz veins. All the vein minerals may be coated by a late iron-manganese oxide. Most often the veins are separate, but they may also occur composite. The veins are from a few millimetres to about three metres wide; most commonly they are one to ten centimetres wide. The radioactivity is mostly due to thorium, but a few veins have a uranium content higher than that of thorium. The thorium content ranges from 60 to 4500 ppm, the uranium from 17 to 1500 ppm. The ratio thorium/uranium ranges from 0.1 to 57.2. The radioactivity is predominantly connected with pigmentary material, thorite, thorianite, monazite and bastnäsite. Other minerals identified in the vein are ægirine, acmite, albite, arfvedsonite, apatite, biotite, calcite, chlorite, eudialyte, fluorite, hematite, lithium mica, mesodialyte, microcline, neptunite, pyrite, quartz and sphalerite. The following constants were calculated from X-ray powder diagrams made with a Guinier-Hagg camera.Bastnäsite: a0 = 7.120 ± 7 x 10-3 Å; C0 = 9.77 ± 2 x 10-2 Å; c0/a0 = 1.372; V0 = 428.96 Å3. Monazite: a0 = 6.780 ± 5 x 10-3 Å; b0 = 7.025 ± 4 x 10-3 Å; C

Highlights

  • A study of the radioactive veins in the area surrounding the Ilimaussaq alkaline intrusion in South Greenland was carried out as part of a radiometric survey of a larger area

  • In the brown albititic and green veins the radioactivity is dominantly due to thorium while in the mineralized cracks it may be due to uranium

  • While uranium-bearing veins like the mineralized cracks described here have been known for a long time, thorium-bearing veins have only been known for the last few years

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

A study of the radioactive veins in the area surrounding the Ilimaussaq alkaline intrusion in South Greenland was carried out as part of a radiometric survey of a larger area. The area covered by this study is situated on the north-east side of the Ilimaussaq intrusion (61 ° N; 46° W) on the south-east side of the peninsula between Bredefjord and Tunugdliarflk (plate 2). The field work was first planned as a geiger survey to be made by non-geologists recording the geiger readings on topographic maps. From this survey it was found that the area surrounding the Ilimaussaq intrusion locally has a strong radioactivity. Many of the results presented in this report are based on those of the earlier work

GEOLOGICAL SETTING OF THE VEINS
DESCRIPTION OF FIELD RELATIONS
ALTERATION OF THE COUNTRY ROCKS
RADIOACTIVITY
VIII. MINERALOGY
COMPARISON WITH OTHER REGIONS
Findings
CHRONOLOGY AND ORIGIN
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