Uranium series disequilibrium in young surficial uranium deposits in southern British Columbia

1984 ◽  
Vol 21 (5) ◽  
pp. 559-566 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. A. Levinson ◽  
C. J. Bland ◽  
J. R. Dean

Disequilibrium studies involving the determination of total U and the activity ratios of 234U/238U and 234U/230Th or activities of 230Th, 226Ra, and 210Pb were carried out on samples from three surficial (generally within 5 m of the surface) uranium deposits in south-central British Columbia that give apparent 234U/230Th ages of 1000–20 000 years. As a result of the young ages, the deposits have not yet reached radioactive secular equilibrium and, therefore, yield very little gamma activity.The deposits formed from groundwaters that leached labile uranium from intermediate to felsic igneous rocks. Two accumulation mechanisms concentrate the uranium: evaporation, and adsorption onto organic matter.The uranium content and the activities of the various daughter nuclides are highly variable within and between the various deposits studied. Some of the variations can be explained in terms of the accumulation processes. In the evaporative process the highest value of uranium and daughter nuclides will be found at the surface, whereas in those deposits in which adsorption is the dominant mechanism these nuclides are found in association with buried organic matter. Under these circumstances, accumulations will be influenced by the flow of groundwater from different sources and also depend on whether daughter nuclides remain immobile or are leached after formation.

1970 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 176-181 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. T. A. Symons ◽  
E. J. Schwarz

Sixty-nine specimens representing 49 late Miocene (10–15 m.y. ago) basaltic lava flows and 4 associated gabbroic intrusive plugs were studied in an attempt to estimate the paleointensity of the earth's magnetic field in south-central British Columbia. The paleointensity determination was based on the comparison of the decay of natural remanent magnetism intensity with that of an artificial thermoremanent magnetism (H = 0.35 Oe) in progressively higher alternating demagnetizing fields (peak: 800 Oe). Only 22 of the 69 specimens were considered to yield reliable paleointensity determinations which give an estimated average equatorial intensity for the late Miocene earth's field of 0.18 Oe ± 0.11. This result agrees reasonably well with those from contemporaneous rocks from North America, Japan, and Iceland. Several low determinations with consistent, normal, or reversed remanence directions suggest that the intensity of the non-dipole components of the late Miocene earth's field must have been very small in the sampled area.


1995 ◽  
Vol 412 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. J. Finch ◽  
J. Suksi ◽  
K. Rasilainen ◽  
R. C. Ewing

AbstractUranium-series activity ratios for U(VI) minerals from the Shinkolobwe mine in southern Zaire indicate that these minerals have not experienced significant preferential loss of uranium since their formation more than 100,000 years ago. The minerals examined include rutherfordine, UO2CO3, schoepite, [(UO2)8O2(OH)12]·12H2O, becquerelite, Ca[(UO2)6O4(OH)6]·8H2O, and uranophane, Ca[(UO2)2(SiO3OH)2]·5H2O. No correlation between mineral species and mineral age was evident. The oxidative dissolution of primary uraninite (UO2+x) has maintained ground waters supersaturated with respect to all of the secondary U(VI) minerals, providing an inexhaustible source of dissolved U6+ for mineral formation and growth. As long as uraninite persists in an oxidizing environment, the assemblage of secondary U(VI) phases is determined by local ground water chemistry (including transitory changes), but not necessarily a unidirectional reaction path towards equilibrium with U(VI) minerals of lower solubility. Thus the Shinkolobwe mine displays a complex assemblage of U(VI) minerals that reflects variations in the availability of dissolved elements besides U. Similarly, for a geologic repository exposed to oxidizing waters, the assemblage of corrosion products that will form during the corrosion of spent UO2 fuel is likely to be as complex as mineral assemblages found in natural uranium deposits under similar conditions.


2019 ◽  
Vol 117 (4) ◽  
pp. 449-456 ◽  
Author(s):  
Charles A. Wilson ◽  
Kenneth L. Matthews ◽  
Amin M. Hamideh ◽  
Wei-Hsung Wang

2004 ◽  
Vol 118 (2) ◽  
pp. 164
Author(s):  
George W. Douglas

In Canada, Lemmon's Holly Fern, Polystichum lemmonii, is restricted to the Baldy Mountain area on the eastern side of the Okanagan River valley in south-central British Columbia. This population represents the northern limits of the species which ranges south through northern Idaho, Washington and Oregon to northern California. In British Columbia, P. lemmonii is associated with ultramafic rocky ridges within a montane forest at an elevation of 1900 m. The population in the Baldy Mountain area is relatively small, unprotected and potentially imperilled by mining exploration, forest road construction or wildfires.


2006 ◽  
Vol 120 (2) ◽  
pp. 163
Author(s):  
George W. Douglas ◽  
Jenifer L. Penny ◽  
Ksenia Barton

In Canada, Dwarf Woolly-heads, Psilocarphus brevissimus var. brevissimus, is restricted to the Similkameen River valley, south of Princeton in southwestern British Columbia and the extreme southeast and southwest corners of Alberta and Saskatchewan, respectively. This paper deals with the three British Columbia populations which represent the northwestern limit of the species which ranges from south-central British Columbia, southward in the western United States to Montana, Idaho, Washington, Oregon, Nevada, Utah, Wyoming, California and Baja California, Mexico. In British Columbia, P. brevissimus is associated with calcareous vernal pools and ephemeral pond edges in large forest openings. This habitat is rare in the area the few existing populations could easily be extirpated or degraded through slight changes in groundwater levels, coalbed methane gas drilling, housing development or recreational vehicles.


1980 ◽  
Vol 17 (11) ◽  
pp. 1454-1461 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rolf W. Mathewes ◽  
John A. Westgate

Ash-grade Bridge River tephra, identified as such on the basis of shard habit, modal mineralogy, and composition of ilmenite, occurs in sedimentary cores from three lakes located to the south of the previously documented plume and necessitates a significant enlargement of the fallout area of that tephra in southwestern British Columbia.These new, more southerly occurrences are probably equivalent to the ~2350 year old Bridge River tephra, although it can be argued from the evidence at hand that the 14C dates and biotite-rich nature support relationship to a slightly earlier Bridge River event.Large differences exist in the 14C age of sediments immediately adjacent to the Bridge River tephra at these three lake sites; maximum ages of 3950 ± 170 years BP (GX-5549) and 3750 ± 210 years BP (I-10041) were obtained at Phair and Fishblue lakes, respectively, whereas the corresponding age at Horseshoe Lake is only 2685 ± 180 years BP (GX-5757). The two older dates are considered to be significantly affected by old carbon contamination for the bedrock locally consists of calcareous sedimentary rocks and the lacustrine sediments are very calcareous. The 14C date from Horseshoe Lake, which occurs in an area of igneous rocks, appears to be only slightly too old relative to the ~2350 year old Bridge River tephra.Well-dated tephra beds, therefore, can be very useful in assessing the magnitude of old carbon errors associated with radiocarbon dates based on limnic sediments. Calcareous gyttja deposits beneath Bridge River tephra within the study area exhibit old carbon errors of the order of 1350–1550 years.


2010 ◽  
Vol 142 (2) ◽  
pp. 135-142 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter J. Landolt ◽  
D. Thomas Lowery ◽  
Lawrence C. Wright ◽  
Constance Smithhisler ◽  
Christelle Gúedot ◽  
...  

AbstractLarvae of Abagrotis orbis (Grote) (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae) are climbing cutworms and can damage grapevines, Vitis vinifera L. (Vitaceae), in early spring by consuming expanding buds. A sex attractant would be useful for monitoring this insect in commercial vineyards. (Z)-7-Tetradecenyl acetate and (Z)-11-hexadecenyl acetate were found in extracts of female abdominal tips. In multiple field experiments, male A. orbis were captured in traps baited with a combination of these two chemicals but not in traps baited with either chemical alone. Males were trapped from mid-September to early October in south-central Washington and south-central British Columbia. Other noctuid moths (Mamestra configurata Walker, Xestia c-nigrum (L.), and Feltia jaculifera (Guenée)) were also captured in traps baited with the A. orbis pheromone and may complicate the use of this lure to monitor A. orbis. Abagrotis discoidalis (Grote) was captured in traps baited with (Z)-7-tetradecenyl acetate but not in traps baited with the two chemicals together.


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