Thorium concentration in Ranchi plateau, India

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  • 7/27/2019 Thorium concentration in Ranchi plateau, India.

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    Thorium concentration in Ranchi plateau and other parts of Jharkhand State,

    India.

    Rivers flowing through Ranchi plateau may also contain thorium.

    By

    Dr. Nitish Priyadarshi

    Thorium is a naturally occurring radioactive chemical element with the symbol Th and

    atomic number 90. It was discovered in 1828 by the Norwegian mineralogist Morten

    Thrane Esmark and identified by the Swedish chemist Jns Jakob Berzelius and namedafter Thor, the Norse god of thunder. Thorium produces a radioactive gas, radon-220, as

    one of its decay products. Secondary decay products of thorium include radium and

    actinium. In nature, virtually all thorium is found as thorium-232, which undergoes alphadecay with a half-life of about 14.05 billion years.

    Berzelius was quite unaware of the tremendous amount of power that this element storeswithin it. Subsequent development in the field of nuclear science and technology,

    however, revealed that thorium might well prove to be equal to the god after whom it was

    named.

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    Thorium, which is transmutated U-233 in a breeder reactor, can be used as a nuclear fuel.

    It is presumed that with the development of breeder technology, thorium will come to

    play a vital role in providing electric power to millions.

    Thorium is widely distributed in the earths crust with an average abundance of 8 ppm

    (parts per million) and is usually associated with uranium or the rare earth-earth elements.The principal mode of occurrence is in the form of veins in granites, synites, pegmatites

    and other acidic intrusions containing thorium- bearing minerals, such as thorite,

    thorianite, uranothorite and monazite. Detrital monazite occurs in quartz-pebbleconglomerates, beach placers, inland placer deposits and dunes.

    The largest known reserves of the thorium are contained in the beach and inland placer

    deposits of monazite, which are exploited for their rare-earth and ThO2 contents. Placerdeposits of monazite are found in Australia, Egypt, India, Liberia, Brazil, Malaysia and

    the USA (Florida).

    Among the inland placer deposits containing heavy mineral there are two appreciableconcentrations of monazite, which are located in the Ranchi plateau of Jharkhand and the

    Purulia planes of West Bengal. These occurrences cover an area of about 608 sq. km.forming a thin cover of an average depth of about 50 cm (which may be locally up to

    2m.). These deposits have been formed due to the weathering and erosion of Precambrian

    gneisses and schists, intruded by pegmatites and porphyritic granites, which are enrichedin monazite and other associated heavy minerals.

    The placer minerals are released from their matrix by weathering. The comminuted

    materials are washed slowly down slope to the nearest stream or to the seashore. Movingstream water sweeps away the lighter matrix, and the heavier placer minerals sink to the

    bottom or are moved downstream relatively shorter distances. The sands of the rivers like

    Swarnrekha, Jumar, Potpoto, kanchi, etc. flowing through Ranchi plateau may containthorium in considerable amount.

    Thorium present in the river streambed sediments are mostly of terrestrial origin and theirconcentrations are related to the type of parent rocks and to the genesis of the sediments.

    The river sediments generally exhibit large variation in composition. This variation can

    be related to the chemical and mineralogical evolution of these sediments along the river,

    influence of tributaries, or different properties of drained soil. The mobility ofradionuclides in the aqueous system is an important factor influencing the content of

    radionuclides in river sediments. Surface run-off waters in the tributaries wash down a

    part of deposited radionuclides and finally store them in the river sediments.

    Most of the radioactive anomalies in the Damodar Valley basins are confined to the

    Panchet sandstones with the preponderance of thorium over uranium. A similar patternhas also been observed in the Barakar sediments of the Hutar basin.

    The granites of the provenance areas fir the Hutar-Daltonganj basins contain anomalous

    uranium values. Uranium mineralization has also been observed in the granitic rocks

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    comprising the southern periphery of the Hutar basin. The Proterozoic granitoids,

    forming the provenance for the Hutar and Auranga subbasin (Jharkhand), have been

    analysed which revealed uranium content up to 520 ppm, while the clays and sandstonesof Barakar Formations have revealed anomalous uranium-thorium values of the order of

    120-150 ppm uranium and less than 100-800 ppm thorium.

    Reference:

    Bateman, A.M. 1955. Economic mineral deposits. John Wiley & Sons, Inc. New York.

    Virnave, S.N. 1999. Nuclear geology and atomic mineral resources. Bharti Bhawan,

    Patna.

    Viswanathan, G., Badri, N.S.R., and Virnave, S.N. 1989. Radioelement distribution in the

    Lower Gondwana sediments of Hutar basin, Palamau district, Jharkhand; its bearing on

    uranium exploration. Exploration Research Atomic minerals Vol. 2 , pp 121-131.

    http://dae.nic.in/writereaddata/lssq%20379.pdfhttp://large.stanford.edu/courses/2012/ph241/bordia1/

    http://dae.nic.in/writereaddata/lssq%20379.pdfhttp://dae.nic.in/writereaddata/lssq%20379.pdf

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