Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://geoscience.nt.gov.au/gemis/ntgsjspui/handle/1/93653
Export to Endnote
Title: Round 17 - Geophysics and Drilling Collaborations program Final Report Murphy West Magnetic and Radiometric Survey
Title Holder / Company: Transition Minerals
GSW Minerals
DevEx Resources
Report id: CR2024-0611
Tenure: EL32453;  EL32454;  EL32456;  EL32473;  EL32474;  EL32881
Year: 2024
Author: Greene, D
Abstract: The project overlies strike extensions of key geological stratigraphy which hosts known uranium Mineral Resource estimates. Many of these uranium occurrences lie within the Westmoreland Conglomerate (see Figure 1) The mineralogy, age and geochemistry of these deposits are similar to that described for the uranium deposits in the Alligator Rivers Uranium Province (ARUP), which lies along the north-western margin of the McArthur Basin. Published papers suggest that similar processes were active in both areas and that potential also exists within the area for unconformity-type uranium mineralization similar to that seen in the ARUP. Despite the geological similarities with adjacent Westmoreland (50Mlbs Uranium), the Murphy West Uranium Project has undergone minimal systematic exploration for uranium due to the remoteness, limited understanding of stratigraphy within the survey area and amount of obscuring Phanerozoic cover which increases westward outside the survey area. A regional scale (3,300km2) airborne radiometric and magnetic survey was flown from 12th July to 25th August 2024 over the area where DevEx interpreted the most prospective geology to occur within the 10,000km2 of project tenure. The objective was to use the radiometric component for direct target definition for on-ground follow-up and to use magnetic data to create a detailed structural and geological interpretation to assist with target definition. A review of all historical open file and preexisting surveys found compromised radiometrics quality, patchy coverage and variable detail (400-200m lines spacings). The survey was planned to provide regional scale coverage at consistent line spacing of 100m and consistent quality of radiometric detection. The survey was successful in its stated objectives with 35,500km2 of survey lines being flown and targets for on-ground follow-up generated from the work.
NOTEAdditional geophysics datasets are available on request
Date Added: 3-Apr-2025
Appears in Collections:Minerals Exploration Reports (MEX)

Files in this Report:
File SizeFormat Add to
Download
Murphy_West_2024_C_01_FinalReport.pdf1.81 MBPDF Add


Items in GEMIS are protected by copyright unless otherwise indicated.

Get Adobe Reader