Abstract

The Flatreef is a world-class platinum-group element (PGE) deposit recently discovered down-dip from existing mining and exploration operations on the northern limb of the Bushveld Complex. Current indicated resources stand at 42 Moz PGE (346 Mt with 3.8 g/t Pt+Pd+Rh+Au, 0.32% Ni and 0.16% Cu) which, in the case of Pt, is equivalent to ~ 10 years global annual production, making it one of the largest PGE deposits on earth. The grade and thickness of the Flatreef mineralised interval is highly unusual, with some drill core intersections containing up to 4.5 g/t Pt+Pd+Rh+Au over 90 m in drill core. Here, we document the down-dip and along-strike litho- and chemostratigraphy of the Flatreef and its footwall and hanging wall rocks, based on a diamond drill core database totalling > 720 km. At the base of the sequence intersected in the drill cores are up to 700-m-thick sills of ultramafic rocks (dunite, harzburgite, pyroxenite) emplaced into pelitic, dolomitic, and locally quartzitic and evaporitic rocks belonging to the Duitschland Formation of the Transvaal Supergroup. Next is an approximately 100–200-m sequence of low-grade-sulphide-mineralised, layered mafic-ultramafic rocks containing abundant sedimentary xenoliths and, in places, several chromite seams or stringers. This is overlain by a ~ 100-m-thick sequence of well-mineralised mafic-ultramafic rocks (the Flatreef sensu strictu), overlain by a laterally persistent mottled anorthosite layer at the base of > 1 km of homogenous Main Zone gabbronorite. Based on stratigraphic, lithological and compositional analogies to the layered rocks in the eastern and western Bushveld Complex, we correlate the Flatreef and its chromite bearing footwall rocks with the Upper Critical Zone, notably the interval between the UG2 chromitite and the Bastard Reef as found elsewhere in the Bushveld Complex. This includes recognition of a Merensky Reef correlative. The ultramafic rocks below the main chromitite seam (UG2 correlative) in the Flatreef footwall are correlated with the Lower Critical and Lower zones. However, compared to the western and eastern Bushveld limbs, the studied sequence is strongly enriched in sulphide and PGE, many of the rocks show elevated CaO, K2O, Rb and Zr contents, and lateral continuity of layers between drill cores is less pronounced than elsewhere in the Bushveld, whereas ultramafic units are locally considerably thickened. These compositional and lithological traits are interpreted to result from a range of processes which include contamination with calcsilicate and hornfels, intrusion of granitic magmas, and the influence of multiple structural events such as pre- to syn-emplacement regional-scale open folding and growth faults. Evidence for the existence of potholes also exists. In the shallow, up-dip portions of the project area, the entire magmatic sequence below the Main Zone becomes increasingly contaminated to the extent that individual units are somewhat more difficult to correlate between drill cores. This package represents the Platreef as exposed in outcrop and shallow bore holes across much of the northern limb of the Bushveld Complex. The new data presented here thus indicate that the Platreef is a relatively more contaminated up-dip extension of parts of the Critical and Lower zones.

Highlights

  • The Bushveld Complex of South Africa is the world’s largest layered intrusion and hosts the bulk of global platinum-group element (PGE) resources (~ 75%, Mudd 2012)

  • Some authors instead proposed that the Platreef was sourced from a distinct staging magma chamber, whereas Naldrett et al (2008) suggested that the Platreef crystallised from residual Upper Critical Zone magma migrating towards the relatively shallow periphery of the Bushveld lopolith

  • We present a detailed stratigraphic framework for the Flareef that may be used to correlate marker units between different areas across the northern limb of the Bushveld Complex

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Summary

Introduction

The Bushveld Complex of South Africa is the world’s largest layered intrusion and hosts the bulk of global PGE resources (~ 75%, Mudd 2012). C Geological map of the Turfspruit farm displaying the position of Shaft #1, important drill holes and section lines discussed in text are largely mined underground and have been exploited for much of the last 100 years, but they have become economically marginal in the last decade, in the wake of increasing production costs. Viable mineralised zones are located near the basal contact of the northern limb of the complex (Fig. 1a, b), normally referred to as “Platreef” (Van der Merwe 1976). This has been mined in large open pits at Anglo Platinum’s Mokgalakwena mine since 1990 and is more profitable, mainly because the mineralised zone is wider, production costs are lower and working conditions are safer

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