Title
Copper Basin Exploration Science (CuBES)

CoPED ID
d83bf747-3550-4152-8adb-3cddb6f67924

Status
Active

Funders

Value
£137,380

Start Date
Jan. 6, 2020

End Date
Jan. 1, 2025

Description

More Like This


The criticality of Cu, Co (+/- V) in battery technology and electricity transmission has established them as key components of the carbon-free energy transition. A major proportion of these elements are sourced from sedimentary basin-hosted deposits, formed from large-scale fluid flow systems. Recent work has shown that diverse basin architectures and processes were responsible for their genesis, yet we still do not understand why so few basins become highly endowed with metals. Given their paucity, the geological evolution of such basins demands the juxtaposition of unique conditions that: (1) generated large volumes of metal-bearing fluid; (2) provided sufficient sulfur; (3) created reducing trap sites; and (4) focused fluid flow into these sites [5]. Understanding large deposits is particularly significant because they are efficient to mine and offer the greatest societal benefits.
Our particular focus is to develop and integrate mineral and petroleum systems approaches to provide a disruptive innovation opportunity in the science and industrial applications in this field. Our objectives are to identify the processes, operating over a range of scales, that lead to the formation of large Cu-Co-(V) deposits and derive new and practical exploration tools. The opportunity is timely, given the current wave of academic interest in these ore systems, and the increased collaboration between industry and academia to develop sophisticated methods that can reduce exploration costs, risk and environmental impact.

To tackle these challenges, we have assembled a multi-institute academic consortium with internationally-recognised expertise across the geosciences. We have also built strategic research alliances with: (1) the UK's major mining houses, Rio Tinto and Anglo American, and with BHP and First Quantum Minerals, all with global interests in sediment-hosted copper mineralisation; (2) the energy sector (Scheupbach Energy); and (3) international academic partners (CSIRO, Univ. Houston, GFZ Potsdam, Universidad Nacional, Buenos Aires. The collaboration between PIs, PDRAs, affiliated PhD students funded outside the grant, industry and international partners will deliver high impact scientific publications, new data and tools to support the development of lower risk mineral exploration strategies, and highlight the UK as a world-leading community for research in basin-hosted mineral systems.


More Information

Potential Impact:
By improving our understanding of the fundamental aspects of sedimentary ore formation we will provide industry with new insights that will enable the development of refined exploration models grounded in physics and chemistry. This may be in our understanding of how alteration zones relate to hidden targets at the district scale, and/or at the broader scale where the knowledge of these processes may serve to develop new regional exploration models. More efficient regional targeting that accurately identifies favourable and unfavourable exploration tracts will result in socio economic benefits with a reduction in environmental impact and significant cost reductions and reduced risk. In the case of sediment-hosted base metal deposits, many basins are barren of significant mineralization, whereas a limited number contain huge resources. Understanding this dichotomy, will have a lasting impact on exploration models for these deposits.

Adrian Boyce PI_PER

Subjects by relevance
  1. Ore prospecting
  2. Ore deposits
  3. Mineral resources
  4. Mining activity
  5. Ore geology
  6. Environmental risks
  7. Environmental effects

Extracted key phrases
  1. Copper Basin Exploration Science
  2. Scale fluid flow system
  3. New regional exploration model
  4. Low risk mineral exploration strategy
  5. Large Cu
  6. Large deposit
  7. Base metal deposit
  8. Criticality
  9. Diverse basin architecture
  10. Refined exploration model
  11. Sedimentary basin
  12. Cubes
  13. Practical exploration tool
  14. Exploration cost
  15. International academic partner

Related Pages

UKRI project entry

No UK locations linked to this project.