Carbon Dioxide Fixation within Mine Wastes of Ultramafic-Hosted Ore Deposits: Examples from the Clinton Creek and Cassiar Chrysotile Deposits, Canada

TitleCarbon Dioxide Fixation within Mine Wastes of Ultramafic-Hosted Ore Deposits: Examples from the Clinton Creek and Cassiar Chrysotile Deposits, Canada
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2009
AuthorsWilson SA, Dipple GM, Power IM, Thom JM, Anderson RG, Raudsepp M, Gabites J, Southam G
JournalECONOMIC GEOLOGY
Volume104
Pagination95-112
Date PublishedJAN-FEB
ISSN0361-0128
Abstract

Carbon dioxide (CO2) is sequestered through the weathering and subsequent mineralization of the chrysotile mine tailings at Clinton Creek, Yukon Territory, and Cassiar, British Columbia, Canada. Accelerated weathering is attributed to a dramatic increase in surface area, which occurs during the milling of ore. We provide a detailed account of the natural process of carbon trapping and storage as it occurs at Clinton Creek and Cassiar, including mineralogy, modes of occurrence, methods of formation for carbonate alteration, light stable isotope geochemistry, and radiocarbon analysis. Powder X-ray diffraction data were used to identify weathering products its the hydrated magnesium carbonate minerals nesquehonite {[}MgCO3 center dot 3H(2)O], dypingite {[}Mg-5(CO3)(4) (OH)(2)center dot 5H(2)O], hydromagnesite {[}Mg-5(CO3)(4)(OH)(2)center dot 4H(2)O], and less commonly lansfordite {[}MgCO3 center dot 5H(2)O]. Textural relationships suggest that carbonate precipitates formed in situ after milling and deposition of tailings. Samples of efflorescent nesquehonite are characterized by delta C-13 values between 6.52 and 14.36 per mil, delta O-18 values between 20.93 and 26.62 per mil, and (FC)-C-14 values (fraction of modern carbon) between 1.072 and 1.114, values which are consistent with temperature-dependent fractionation of modern atmospheric CO2 during mineralization. Samples of dypingite +/- hydromagnesite collected front within 0.2 m of the tailings surface give delta C-13 values between -1.51 and +10.02 per mil, delta O-18 values between +17.53 and +28.40 per mil, and (FC)-C-14 values between 1.026 and 1.146, which suggests precipitation from modern atmospheric CO2 in a soil-like environment. Field observations and isotopic data suggest that hydrated magnesium carbonate minerals formed in two environments. Nesquehonite formed in an evaporative environment on the surface of tailings piles, and dypingite and hydromagnesite formed in the subsurface environment with characteristics similar to soil carbonate. lit both cases, these minerals have been trapping and storing the greenhouse gas, CO2, directly from the atmosphere. Combined use of 6130, 6180, and (FC)-C-14 data has been applied effectively as a tool for verifying and monitoring sequestration of atmospheric CO2 within mine tailings. A number of other deposit types produce tailings suitable for CO2 sequestration, including Cu-Ni-PGE deposits, diamondiferous kimberlite pipes, and podiform chromite deposits. Our results suggest that conversion of about 10 wt percent of tailings to carbonate minerals could offset the greenhouse gas emissions from many ultramafic-hosted mining operations.