Diamond
Diamond
Diamond
In 1983, the Argyle mine was established as the first major diamond-mining operation in Australia. Almost immediately, it became the worlds largest source of diamonds in terms of the volume (carats) produced. The discovery, development, and operation of this mine challenged conventional beliefs about diamond geology, mineral processing, and the marketing of gem diamonds. In its peak year, 1994, the mine produced over 42 million carats (Mct) of rough diamonds, which represented 40% of the worlds production. A large proportion of this staggering output consists of small brown-toyellowas well as some near-colorless and colorlessrough diamonds. A major cutting industry developed in India to process these diamonds into cut gems. The Argyle mine is also noted for the production of a very limited amount of rare pink diamonds.
The Argyle mine, located in a remote northeastern worlds largest producer of diamonds by volume (figure 1). Production in 2000 reached 26.5 million carats (approximately 25% of annual world production), following a peak in 1994 of 42.8 million carats, which was 40% of the diamonds produced worldwide that year. The Argyle mine is known not only for the very large quantity of diamonds it produces, which vary from brown to yellow and from near-colorless to colorless (figure 2), but also for the consistent recovery of a small number of pink diamonds. Prior to 1998, no plans had been finalized for the mine to continue past 2002. In October of that year, however, a decision was made to cut back the 400 m (1,300 ft) high west wall to widen and deepen the pit. With the orebody apparently extending to depth, plans now call for open-pit mining to continue until at least 2006, with a possible transition to an underground operation at that time. The Argyle mine provides a good example of the modern techniques used both to find viable diamond deposits and to recover the gems on a large scale. Therefore, this article discusses the exploration methods employed to discover the first economic deposits of diamonds in this area of Australia, as well as the mining and recovery techniques used at the mine. The Argyle AK1 pipe represented the first major deposit of diamonds found in lamproite (a kind of volcanic rock similar to kimberlite), the discovery of which called into question prevailing theories of diamond occurrence. We also briefly summarize the gemological characteristics of Argyle diamonds. The Argyle mine is 100% controlled by Rio Tinto Ltd. (although
until late 2000 it was a joint venture with Rio Tinto [56.8%], Ashton Mining Ltd. [38.2%], and the Western Australian Diamond Trust [5%]). It was the first largescale operation for recovering diamonds in Australia. The ore grade is currently around 3.0 ct per tonne of host rock, which is three to 10 times higher than the typical grade at other primary diamond deposits. (Note: In accordance with the usage in other diamond mines throughout the world, volumes of rock are expressed here in metric tonnes, where 1 U.S. short ton = 2,000 pounds = 0.907 metric tonnes.) However, even with this high grade, diamonds comprise only 0.0001% by weight of the ore, so sophisticated ore-processing methods are necessary to extract this very small proportion of diamonds from the very large amount of host rock. In addition, the company conducts its mining activities in an environmentally and socially responsible way.
Figure 1. This aerial view of the Argyle mine, looking southwest, shows a portion of the AK1 pit. The shape of the open pit closely follows the outline of the lamproite pipe. In both the foreground and at the opposite end of the pit are dumps where the reddish brown overburden rock has been moved for storage. Since 1985, when mining of the orebody commenced, approximately 550 million tonnes of lamproite ore and overburden rock have been removed from the open pit. Brownish diamonds, such as the crystals and round brilliants shown In the inset, are commonly produced and marketed as cognac or champagne diamonds. The three largest diamonds weigh 4.11, 4.07, and 2.19 ct; inset photo by Shane F. McClure.
Location and Access. The Argyle mine is situated in the northeastern part of Western Australia, approximately 120 km (75 miles) by road southwest of Kununurra (the nearest town), 540 km (335 miles) southwest of Darwin, and 2,200 km (1,370 miles) northeast of Perth, the state capital (figure 3). The AK1 pipe is located at the headwaters of Smoke Creek in a small valley in the southern end of the Matsu Range, which is the southeastern extension of the Ragged Range (figure4). Associated alluvial diamond deposits occur along Smoke Creek and Limestone Creek, which drain the AK1 pipe to the north and southeast, respectively. Both drainage systems then turn northeast toward Lake Argyle, 35 km (22 miles) downstream from the mine. Access to this region is by commercial air flight from Perth or Darwin to Kununurra, and then by a short chartered flight to a landing strip at the mine site. Alternatively, one can travel two hours by vehicle from Kununurra along a paved highway and then on a dirt road to the site. Access to the mine site is allowed only with prior permission.The region is characterized by the presence of bulbous boab trees and abundant termite mounds. Other than the hills of the Matsu and Ragged ranges, much of the terrain surrounding the mine area consists of broad, flat plains. This region contains a few small Aboriginal communities. All materials and supplies must be brought in from Kununurra by truck or aircraft if they cannot be generated at the mine site.
Figure 2. A range of colors produced at the Argyle mine can be seen in this selection of rough diamonds. Note also the variety of crystal shapes, including a relatively small proportion of octahedra and macles, and abundantrounded or irregular shapes.Thesecrystals vary from about 0.5 to 1 ct; as such, they are larger than the crystals typically recovered from the mine, which have a mean size of less than 0.1 ct.
DIAMOND DEPOSITS
Exploration for Diamond Host Rocks. In 1895, gold prospectors first found diamonds by accident in stream gravels at Nullagine in Western Australia (figure 3, inset). Many thousands of carats of diamonds were recovered from this and other alluvial deposits in various parts of the country over the next 50 years, but not until the introduction in the 1960s of modern geologic exploration concepts and techniques were diamond-bearing pipesthe primary sourcesfinally discovered (Geach, 1986; Janse, 1992). Beginning in the 1970s, as a result of renewed interest in mineral prospecting in Western Australia, the geologically ancient shield areas in this region were selected as prime targets for diamond exploration. A shield area, or craton, is a portion of the continental crust that has been geologically stable (i.e., not involved in mountain building, faulting, deformation, etc.) for billions of years. The geologic settings of the diamondiferous kimberlite pipes in southern Africa were used as models for the selection of shield areas in Western Australia for diamond exploration (see Jaques et al., 1986; Haggerty, 1999). Although kimberlites were believed to be the only terrestrial source of diamonds at the time, Prider (1960) had suggested that a petrologically related volcanic rock known as lamproite might also host diamonds in this part of Australia. Both the discovery of alluvial diamonds at Nullagine and the occurrence of lamproites along the tectonic margins of the (ironically named) Kimberley craton (in northern Western Australia) were additional reasons for selecting the shield areas of Western Australia for diamond exploration (figure 3). Clifford (1966) had observed that the known diamondiferous kimberlites in southern Africa were restricted in their occurrences to ancient cratons that had been tectonically stable for at least the past 1.5 billion years. This condition was met, at least in part, by the geologic conditions of the Kimberley craton (Deakin et al., 1989). Following the discovery of several alluvial diamonds in the West Kimberley region along the Lennard River (Ellendale area) in 1969, a consortium of mining companies, collectively known as the Kalumburu Joint Venture (succeeded by the Ashton Joint Venture), began systematic diamond exploration throughout this region. Their objective was to discover an economic diamond deposit that would be amenable to mechanized, large-scale, low-cost, open-pit mining. Since only minor quantities of alluvial diamonds had been recovered from this region during the previous century, with no primary diamond sources known at the time, these exploration efforts in the Kimberley craton were highly speculative. Nevertheless, early in 1976, geologists from this consortium found certain minerals (such as ilmenite, chromite, chrome diopside, and pyrope garnet) in stream-gravel concentrates which indicated the presence of diamond-bearing host rocks.
To reduce the need for costly bulk-rock sampling, geologists devised rapid evaluation methods to check gravel samples for these diamond indicator minerals (figure 5). Reconnaissance alluvial sampling using these techniques over an area of 200,000 km2 revealed a classic suite of kimberlite indicator mineralsas well as a different suite of minerals that are now known to be characteristic of lamproites (although their significance was not recognized immediately)at several locations within and around the Kimberley craton. Careful geologic fieldwork, combined with airborne magnetometer surveys and subsequent testing for the presence of diamondiferous host rocks, led to the eventual discovery by a number of companies of more than 80 kimberlite and lamproite occurrences within and around the Kimberley craton. To date, however, only one of these occurrences, the Argyle deposit, has been developed into a mine. Other potentially significant diamond occurrences, which at present are being evaluated for their economic viability, are two lamproites located at Ellendale in the West Kimberley province and two kimberlites in the North Kimberley province. In most of these instances, the diamondiferous rocks were discovered in strongly deformed tectonic belts along the margins of the Kimberley craton, and not within the rocks of the craton itself.
Figure 5. Two geologists sample stream gravels in a remote portion of the Kimberley region in Western Australia to locate diamond indicator minerals. The size of the region, and its remoteness, meant that a helicopter was needed to reach sites targeted for diamond exploration. Here, the geologists are excavating a heavy-mineral sample from gravel trapped behind a natural rock dam in a creek. A special geologic laboratory was set up in Perth to evaluate the mineral content of such samples.
Discovery of the Argyle Pipe and Alluvial Deposits. In August 1979, following almost eight years of geologic exploration in the Kimberley region, two diamond crystals were found in a 40 kg sample of gravel collected in Smoke Creek. Further
sampling upstream led to the discovery of alluvial deposits along this creek. Then, in early October 1979, the exploration team reached the headwaters of Smoke Creek, which drains a small northward-facing valley in the Matsu Range, and found a large, highgrade primary diamond deposit in an olivine lamproite that is now referred to as the AK1 pipe (figures 4 and 6). The separate Limestone Creek alluvial deposit was identified two years later, after the completion of further gravel sampling in the area.
GEOLOGIC SETTING OF THE ARGYLE MINE
The Kimberley craton consists of a central core of a thick series of nearly flat-lying sedimentary and volcanic rocks that were deposited between 1.9 and 1.6 billion years ago. These rocks form the Kimberley Plateau. They are underlain by a basement of crystalline igneous and metamorphic rocks, which are not exposed on the surface of the plateau. Recent investigations have indicated that the basement is of Archean age, that is, more than 2.5 billion years old (Graham et al., 1999). This central Archean craton is bounded along its southeastern margin by the Halls Creek Mobile Zone (geographically called the East Kimberleys), and along its southwestern margin by the King Leopold Mobile Zone (geographically called the West Kimberleys; again, see figure 3). Diamondiferous kimberlites have been found on the central Archean craton, whereas diamondiferous lamproites have been found in or near the associated mobile zones. This came as a great surprise to geologists at the time, becauseapart from alluvial depositssignificant quantities of diamonds were only known to occur in kimberlites located on Archean cratons (Clifford, 1966; Janse, 1992). The diamondiferous rocks of both types occur as volcanic dikes, pipes, and crater depositswhich are typical modes of emplacement for kimberlite and lamproite magmas (Hawthorne, 1975; Mitchell, 1986, 1989). Geologic Setting of the Argyle AK1 Pipe. The AK1 olivine lamproite pipe (or diatreme) is located approximately 7 km (4.5 miles) west of the Halls Creek Fault, which forms the eastern boundary of the Halls Creek Mobile Zone (Boxer et al., 1989). This mobile zone is formed by an exposed basement of crystalline metamorphic rocks intruded by later granites, which range in age from 2.5 to 1.8 million years; that is, they are younger than the rocks of the central Archean Kimberley craton. Rocks in the Halls Creek Mobile Zone have been strongly deformed by faulting and folding, and form a landscape of flat plains and low ranges. The northern part of the belt is overlain by northerly dipping sedimentary and volcanic rocks that range in age from 1.5 billion to 500 million years; some of these form the Ragged Range, which rises up to 450 m (1,500 ft) above the basement plain. The Argyle pipe intruded these younger rocks along a pre-existing fault. The diamond deposit was preserved from erosion by resistant outcrops of
these rocks, which enclose the upper part of the pipe and the crater. In areas further south, where the host rocks have been eroded, similar pipes and craters have been worn down to a root zone of a few dikes and stringers, such as the Lissadell Road Dike Zone (Janse, 1992). For a discussion of the structures of a pipe and a diatreme, see Kirkley et al. (1991). DESCRIPTION OF THE DIAMOND OCCURRENCE The AK1 Pipe and a Model for Its Formation. In cross-section, the AK1 pipe exhibits the typical carrot-like structure of a diatreme. When first discovered, the pipe occupied the entire valley floor along Smoke Creek. The pipe itself is not oriented vertically, but is tilted northward at an angle of approximately 30. Its outline on the surface resembles the shape of a tadpole, with its enlarged head to the north and its narrower tail elongated in a southerly direction. It is almost 2,000 m (1.2 miles) long, and it varies in width from approximately 600 m (1,950 ft) at the head to 150 m (500 ft) along the tail (see figure 4). This elongate shape is thought to have resulted from post-intrusion faulting and the regional tilting of the pipe. When found, the AK1 pipe had a surface area of about 50 hectares (~125 acres). However, it is brecciated and fault-bounded on several of its outer contacts, so the original intrusion may have been larger. Radiometric dating (using the rubidium-strontium and potassium-argon methods) of the lamproite rocks within the pipe indicates an emplacement age of 1.178 0.047 billion years (Pidgeon et al., 1989). The diamonds themselves are age-dated at approximately 1.58 billion years (Chapman et al.1996). Geologic study has revealed the presence of both tuffaceous and magmatic varieties of lamproite within the pipe (derived from volcanic ash falls and magma crystallization, respectively; Jaques et al.1986, 1989b,c). According to a geologic model proposed by Boxer et al. (1989), the lamproite magma that formed the AK1 pipe rose within a zone of weakness in the crust along the mobile belt into overlying quartzrich sediments. Subsequent interaction of the heated magma with groundwater in these permeable sediments resulted in a series of volcanic explosions over an extended period of time, which produced the rocks within the pipe itself. Ejection of large amounts of magma, accompanied by the downward migration of the explosive activity within the pipe, produced a subsidence of the volcanic rocks and surrounding sediments. In turn, this led to the formation of a volcanic crater that eventually filled with groundwater as well as with ash and sediments. More detailed descriptions of the geology of the AK1 pipe can be found in Atkinson et al. (1984a,b), Boxer et al. (1989), Jaques et al. (1986, 1989b,c), Janse (1992), and Smith (1996).