Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://repositorio.ufc.br/handle/riufc/64702
Type: Artigo de Periódico
Title: The Itataia phosphate-uranium deposit (Ceará, Brazil) new petrographic, geochemistry and isotope studies
Authors: Veríssimo, César Ulisses Vieira
Santos, Roberto Ventura
Parente, Clóvis Vaz
Oliveira, Claudinei Gouveia de
Cavalcanti, José Adilson Dias
Nogueira Neto, José de Araújo
Keywords: Isotope geochemistry;Hydrothermal fluids;Phosphorus-uraniferous ores;Itataia deposit;Brazil
Issue Date: 2016
Publisher: Journal of South American Earth Sciences
Citation: VERÍSSIMO, César Ulisses Vieira et al. The Itataia phosphate-uranium deposit (Ceará, Brazil) new petrographic, geochemistry and isotope studies. Journal of South American Earth Sciences, [s.l.], v. 70, p. 115-144, 2016.
Abstract: The Itataia phosphate-uranium deposit is located in Santa Quiteria, in central Cear a State, northeastern Brazil. Mineralization has occurred in different stages and involves quartz leaching (episyenitization), brecciation and microcrystalline phase formation of concretionary apatite. The last constitutes the main mineral of Itatiaia uranium ore, namely collophane. Collophanite ore occurs in massive bodies, lenses, breccia zones, veins or episyenite in marble layers, calc-silicate rocks and gneisses of the Itataia Group. There are two accepted theories on the origin of the earliest mineralization phase of Itataia ore: syngenetic (primary) e where the ore is derived from a continental source and then deposited in marine and coastal environments; and epigenetic (secondary) e whereby the fluids are of magmatic, metamorphic and meteoric origin. The characterization of pre- or post-deformational mineralization is controversial, since the features of the ore are interpreted as deformation. This investigation conducted isotopic studies and chemical analyses of minerals in marbles and calcsilicate rocks of the Alcantil and Barrigas Formations (Itataia Group), as well as petrographic and structural studies. Analysis of the thin sections shows at least three phosphate mineral phases associated with uranium mineralizaton: (1) A prismatic fluorapatite phase associated with chess-board albite, arfvedsonite and ferro-eckermannite; (2) a second fluorapatite phase with fibrous radial or colloform habits that replaces calcium carbonate in marble, especially along fractures, with minerals such as quartz, chlorite and zeolite also identified in calc-silicate rocks; and (3) an younger phosphate phase of botryoidal apatite (fluorapatite and hydroxyapatite) related with clay minerals and probably others calcium and aluminum phosphates. Detailed isotopic analysis carried out perpendicularly to the mineralized levels and veins in the marble revealed significant variation in isotopic ratios. Mineralized zones exhibit a decrease in d13C and d18O isotope values and a higher 87Sr/86Sr ratio toward the center of the vein. In conjunction with petrographic studies, these changes contesting the hypothesis of a sedimentary origin for uranium and suggest a radiogenic Sr input by alkaline to peralkaline fluids from fertile granites of the end of Brasiliano/Pan-African orogeny, located outside the deposit. The origin of the phosphorous is associated with phosphorite deposits in the same depositional environment of the neoproterozoic supracrustal quartz-pelite-carbonate sediments of the Itataia Group. Considering the studies conducted here and available geological data, three main mineralizing events can be identified in Itataia: (1) an initial high temperature event connected with a sodium metasomatism-related uranium episode, taking place in Borborema Province and its African counterpart; (2) a second lower temperature stage, consisting of a multiphase cataclastic/hydrothermal event limited to fault and paleokarst zones; and (3) a third and final event, developed in frankly oxidizing conditions. The last two involving mixing of hydrothermal and meteoric fluids.
URI: http://www.repositorio.ufc.br/handle/riufc/64702
ISSN: 0895-9811
Access Rights: Acesso Aberto
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