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Articles

Driving the paradigm shift of near surface exploration geochemistry using ultrafine soils

 

Summary

Soils are widely used as a geochemical sample medium. These samples are sieved to <250 μm or <180 μm to remove larger gravels and coarse sand and later pulverized for analysis, but no other refinement is commonly used. Why is this the case? In transported cover, the soils that host/adsorb the mobile element signature are the smallest size fractions, so we should consider concentrating the clay size fraction (<2 μm) as an improved sample medium. Industry is unlikely to fully adopt these changes without proof of the benefit of refining the size fraction so a series of experiments were conducted to demonstrate the value of using <2 μm fractions for exploration geochemistry. Twenty-seven composite reference soils were collected in the vicinity of known mineral deposits (including background areas) that reflect the common soil types of Western Australia. These soils were used in replicate testing to assess differences in particle size, sample weight, dispersants and how this relates to the geochemistry with intent to optimise the extraction and speed of ultra-fine fraction recovery. Following the refinement of the technique, we commercialised and then applied the new UltraFine+ workflow to numerous orientation site studies, including reprocessed archived regional soil samples from the Geological Survey of Western Australia. Orientation results were promising. Analysing fine fractions (<2 μm) generated reproducible, reliable results, with bigger concentrations. Key benefits were the removal of nugget effects (for Au) and the challenges with detection limits in materials that are dominantly quartz sand. Importantly, the study revealed a marked decrease in censored results for Au (63% to 10% below detection limit) and less variation with sampling depth in soil profiles. The UltraFine+ workflow demonstrates the additional value from (re-) assaying regional soil and sediment samples to generate new targets and improve regional geochemical maps.

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