Abstract

Uraninite-coffinite vein-type mineralisation with significant predominance of uraninite over coffinite occurs in the Příbram, Jáchymov and Horní Slavkov ore districts and the Potůčky, Zálesí and Předbořice uranium deposits. These uranium deposits are hosted by faults that are mostly developed in low- to high-grade metamorphic rocks of the basement of the Bohemian Massif. Textural features and the chemical composition of uraninite, coffinite and ningyoite were studied using an electron microprobe. Collomorphic uraninite was the only primary uranium mineral in all deposits studied. The uraninites contained variable and elevated concentrations of PbO (1.5 wt %–5.4 wt %), CaO (0.7 wt %–8.3 wt %), and SiO2 (up to 10.0 wt %), whereas the contents of Th, Zr, REE and Y were usually below the detection limits of the electron microprobe. Coffinite usually forms by gradual coffinitization of uraninite in ore deposits and the concentration of CaO was lower than that in uraninites, varying from 0.6 wt % to 6.5 wt %. Coffinite from the Jáchymov ore district was partly enriched in Zr (up to 3.3 wt % ZrO2) and Y (up to 5.5 wt % Y2O3), and from the Potůčky uranium deposit, was distinctly enriched in P (up to 8.8 wt % P2O5), occurring in association with ningyoite. The chemical composition of ningyoite was similar to that from type locality; however, ningyoite from Potůčky was distinctly enriched in REE, containing up to 22.3 wt % REE2O3.

Highlights

  • The Bohemian Massif is the easternmost segment of the European Variscan belt, which hosts a large number of uranium deposits (Figure 1) [1,2,3]

  • More than three-quarters of the total uranium extracted in the territory of the Czech Republic originated from ore deposits developed in fault structures hosted by metamorphic rocks, igneous rocks and/or folded sediments

  • Uraninite usually occurred in the form of spherical or botryoidal aggregates enclosed in carbonate gangue and/or was associated with quartz

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Summary

Introduction

The Bohemian Massif is the easternmost segment of the European Variscan belt, which hosts a large number of uranium deposits (Figure 1) [1,2,3]. More than three-quarters of the total uranium extracted in the territory of the Czech Republic (which slightly exceeds 100,000 tonnes) originated from ore deposits developed in fault structures hosted by metamorphic rocks, igneous rocks and/or folded sediments. Two principal types of these basement-hosted deposits can be distinguished. The first type is represented by deposits hosted by shear zones, usually containing low-grade uranium mineralisation disseminated in strongly hydrothermally altered and mylonitized rocks. Typical examples of the shear-zone hosted deposits of the Bohemian Massif include the Rožná and Olší deposits (total production 23,000 t U)

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