Title | Surficial geochemistry associated with the deeply buried Millennium and Phoenix uranium deposits, Athabasca Basin, northern Saskatchewan |
Download | Downloads |
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Licence | Please note the adoption of the Open Government Licence - Canada
supersedes any previous licences. |
Author | Krahenbil, A; Hattori, K; Power, M; Kotzer, T |
Source | Geological Survey of Canada, Open File 7611, 2014, 1 sheet, https://doi.org/10.4095/293928 Open Access |
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Year | 2014 |
Publisher | Natural Resources Canada |
Document | open file |
Lang. | English |
Media | on-line; digital |
File format | pdf |
Province | Saskatchewan |
NTS | 74H |
Area | Key Lake; McArthur River |
Lat/Long WENS | -106.0000 -104.0000 58.0000 57.0000 |
Subjects | economic geology; geochemistry; geochemical anomalies; geochemical analyses; uranium; uranium deposits; mineralization; mineral deposits; sedimentary rocks; sandstones; unconformities; unconformity-type
deposit; soil geochemistry; Athabasca Basin; Phoenix Deposit; Millennium Deposit; Precambrian |
Illustrations | location maps; photographs; plots |
Program | Targeted Geoscience Initiative (TGI-4) Uranium Ore Systems |
Released | 2014 05 12 |
Summary | (Plain Language Summary, not published) The Targeted Geoscience Initiative (TGI-4) is a collaborative federal geoscience program that provides industry with the next generation of geoscience
knowledge and innovative techniques to better detect buried mineral deposits, thereby reducing some of the risks of exploration. This poster presentation documents the multi-year reproducibility of surficial geochemical exploration methods for
deeply-buried uranium deposits in the Athabasca Basin of Saskatchewan. |
GEOSCAN ID | 293928 |
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