Conference Proceedings
The AusIMM Proceedings 1990
Conference Proceedings
The AusIMM Proceedings 1990
Coastal Palaeogeography and Heavy Mineral Sand Exploration Targets in the Western Murray Basin, South Australia
The Murray Basin is known to contain major deposits of heavy mineral sands and intensive exploration for new deposits is being conducted in Victoria, South Australia and New South Wales. The western Basin was well served in the Pliocene and Early Pleistocene by a variety of appropriate sediment sources, and potential coastal traps. Immature, fluvially-sourced sediments forming the Pliocene coastal complex of the Marmon-Jabuk Range in South Australia are part of a marginal marine assemblage containing a suite of economically important heavy minerals that include ihnenite, zircon, rutile and tourmaline. From a consideration of Pliocene palaeogeography and coastal dynamics, specific targets where concentrating processes are likely to have operated are identified in the South Australian portion of the Murray Basin. Such palaeo-environments include the down-drift, littoral zone of discrete foredunes or coastal barriers, the source area for transgressive dune complexes, tombolo facies, and intertidal shoals and sandbanks. Similar coastal processes are recognised for a preserved Early Pleistocene barrier complex.
Contributor(s):
A P Belperio, R G Bluck
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- Published: 1990
- PDF Size: 0.627 Mb.
- Unique ID: P_PROC1990_1746