Uranium exploration methodology in cold climates

The uranium prospecting boom of the past decade had, as a major consequence, the rapid development and proliferation of exploration methods for source materials. Numerous established methods were developed and refined whilst new techniques were introduced proving, in some instances, to be highly suc...

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Main Author: Sims, J.M.
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: University of Alaska Mineral Industry Research Laboratory 1980
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11122/2154
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spelling ftunivalaska:oai:scholarworks.alaska.edu:11122/2154 2023-05-15T15:00:39+02:00 Uranium exploration methodology in cold climates Sims, J.M. 1980-03 http://hdl.handle.net/11122/2154 en_US eng University of Alaska Mineral Industry Research Laboratory Sims, J.M., 1980, Uranium exploration methodology in cold climates: University of Alaska Mineral Industry Research Laboratory Open File 80-6, 141 p. http://hdl.handle.net/11122/2154 Technical Report 1980 ftunivalaska 2023-02-23T21:35:49Z The uranium prospecting boom of the past decade had, as a major consequence, the rapid development and proliferation of exploration methods for source materials. Numerous established methods were developed and refined whilst new techniques were introduced proving, in some instances, to be highly successful. To the explorationist the proliferation of instrumental hardware and detection systems was something of a headache with the result that in uranium exploration, more so than in other types of prospecting, the choice of exploration method at the appropriate stage of prospecting was frequently ill founded. The situation also spawned ‘black box’ purveyors who made extravagant claims for their equipment. Money was wasted through over kill applications of exploration method accompanied in many instances by deficiencies in the interpretation of results. This project was originally conceived as a means of evaluating, reviewing and filtering from a burgeoning array of systems the most appropriate exploration techniques applicable to cold climate environments. This goal has been trimmed somewhat since it had been hoped to incorporate site investigation data assembled in the field by the writer as appropriate case history material. This was not possible and as a consequence this report is a 'state of the art review' of the applicability of currently available techniques in Arctic and Subarctic environments. Reference is made to published case history data, where appropriate, supportive of the techniques or methods reviewed. Abstract -- Introduction -- Prospecting methods in relation to Arctic and Subarctic environments -- Review of direct exploration methods -- Radiometric methods -- Airborne spectrometry -- Car borne and hand held instrumentation -- Geochemical methods -- Soil and stream sediment methods -- Geobotanical methods -- Water sampling - Hydrogeochemical methods -- Other metods -- Optimal exploration method selection -- References -- Table of exploration methods discussed in this report. Report Arctic Subarctic University of Alaska: ScholarWorks@UA Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection University of Alaska: ScholarWorks@UA
op_collection_id ftunivalaska
language English
description The uranium prospecting boom of the past decade had, as a major consequence, the rapid development and proliferation of exploration methods for source materials. Numerous established methods were developed and refined whilst new techniques were introduced proving, in some instances, to be highly successful. To the explorationist the proliferation of instrumental hardware and detection systems was something of a headache with the result that in uranium exploration, more so than in other types of prospecting, the choice of exploration method at the appropriate stage of prospecting was frequently ill founded. The situation also spawned ‘black box’ purveyors who made extravagant claims for their equipment. Money was wasted through over kill applications of exploration method accompanied in many instances by deficiencies in the interpretation of results. This project was originally conceived as a means of evaluating, reviewing and filtering from a burgeoning array of systems the most appropriate exploration techniques applicable to cold climate environments. This goal has been trimmed somewhat since it had been hoped to incorporate site investigation data assembled in the field by the writer as appropriate case history material. This was not possible and as a consequence this report is a 'state of the art review' of the applicability of currently available techniques in Arctic and Subarctic environments. Reference is made to published case history data, where appropriate, supportive of the techniques or methods reviewed. Abstract -- Introduction -- Prospecting methods in relation to Arctic and Subarctic environments -- Review of direct exploration methods -- Radiometric methods -- Airborne spectrometry -- Car borne and hand held instrumentation -- Geochemical methods -- Soil and stream sediment methods -- Geobotanical methods -- Water sampling - Hydrogeochemical methods -- Other metods -- Optimal exploration method selection -- References -- Table of exploration methods discussed in this report.
format Report
author Sims, J.M.
spellingShingle Sims, J.M.
Uranium exploration methodology in cold climates
author_facet Sims, J.M.
author_sort Sims, J.M.
title Uranium exploration methodology in cold climates
title_short Uranium exploration methodology in cold climates
title_full Uranium exploration methodology in cold climates
title_fullStr Uranium exploration methodology in cold climates
title_full_unstemmed Uranium exploration methodology in cold climates
title_sort uranium exploration methodology in cold climates
publisher University of Alaska Mineral Industry Research Laboratory
publishDate 1980
url http://hdl.handle.net/11122/2154
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
Subarctic
genre_facet Arctic
Subarctic
op_relation Sims, J.M., 1980, Uranium exploration methodology in cold climates: University of Alaska Mineral Industry Research Laboratory Open File 80-6, 141 p.
http://hdl.handle.net/11122/2154
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