Mining Mirror June 2018 | Page 8

Global Lab lavas could Most iron is found in sedimentary rock. lead to new discoveries Geologists have discovered that some magmas had split into two separate liquids, one of which is very rich in iron. Their findings can help to discover new iron ore deposits for mining, writes Katrien Bollen. [6] MINING MIRROR JUNE 2018 I ron ore is mined in about 50 countries. Australia, Brazil, and China are currently the largest producers. Iron ore is mostly used to produce the steel objects that are all around us — from paper clips to kitchen appliances and the supporting beams in skyscrapers. Most iron ore deposits are found in sedimentary rocks. Others are mined in volcanic complexes such as El Laco in Chile and Kiruna in Sweden. These iron ore deposits, called Kiruna-type deposits, account for about 10% of the global production of iron; yet, nobody knows how they are formed. In Nature Communications, a peer-reviewed journal published by the Nature Publishing Group — an international team of researchers from institutions including KU Leuven (Belgium), Leibniz University Hannover, and ULiège — recently presented the first evidence that these iron ore deposits are formed when magma splits into two separate liquids. “Previous studies have always focused on the texture or the composition of natural rocks. We were the first to actually reproduce magmas in the lab, such as the ones found in El Laco,” says last author Olivier Namur from the Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences at KU Leuven, Belgium. “We wanted to reproduce the conditions found in magma chambers, where molten rock accumulates when it cannot rise to the surface of the Earth. This is also where the iron ore deposits beneath volcanoes are formed, so reproducing the temperature and pressure of the magma chambers seemed well worth examining,” adds Namur. “We produced a mixture of iron-rich ore samples and typical lavas surrounding Kiruna-type deposits. This created a bulk magma composition that we believe exists in the deep magma chamber beneath volcanoes. We placed the mixture in a furnace and raised the temperature to 1 000–1 040°C. We also increased the pressure to about 1 000 times the atmospheric pressure of Earth. These are the conditions of a magma chamber.