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Chilean Iron Belt

Geological province in Chile From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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The Chilean Iron Belt is a geological province rich in iron ore deposits in northern Chile. It extends as a north-south beld along the western part of the Chilean regions of Coquimbo and Atacama, chiefly between the cities of La Serena and Taltal.[1][2] The belt follows much of the Atacama Fault System and is about 600 km long and 25 km broad.[2][3]

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Iron oxide-apatite, iron oxide copper gold ore deposits (IOCG) and manto-type copper and silver are the main types of deposits.[1][2] Iron-apatite and IOCG are considered to have different origins.[4] Manto-type deposits are concentrated in the northern part of the belt and are chiefly emplaced on rocks of La Negra Formation.[1] The belt host also significant resources of cobalt which were deemed by 2017 to have the potential to be extracted as by-products of iron and copper mining along the belt.[5]

The ores of the Chilean Iron Belt formed in separate pulses in the Cretaceous period as result of magmatic and hydrothermal processes.[1] At least part of the iron oxide-apatite rock originated from molten iron in the form of lava, tephra.[3] and intrusions.[4] Thus iron oxide apatite magma cooled into rock variously from surface volcanoes to depths of 10 km over even more.[4] Various deposits are covered by continuous sheets alluvial sedmients that form plains on surface.[6]

Some geologists have speculated that a large meteorite impact in the Pacific during the Cretaceous period may have set in motion a series of tectonic changes that led to the formation the ores.[7]

Systematic survey of the iron ores of the belt for economic exploitation begun with civil engineer Carlos Vattier in the late 19th century[8][9] and continued with Juan Brüggen who published a report on them in 1913.[10][11] Mining engineer C. Linnemann took over government-commissioned studies at the recommendation of Brüggen and surveyed southern part of the belt in 1917 and 1918.[11] Various ore deposits of the belt were studied by Carlos Ruiz Fuller and co-workers for aspects of their economic geology in the mid-1940s publishing a report in 1946.[12] Studies on ore genesis in the iron belt were published by Ruiz Fuller and his co-workers in 1967 in Spanish and in 1968 in English.[13]

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Iron mines along the Chilean Iron Belt

Active, closed and proposed mines in the iron belt in Coquimbo Region.
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References

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