Preliminary Study of Geochemical, Mineralogical and Magnetic Susceptibility Properties of Flotation Tailings from the Pb-Zn-Cu-Ag Rudnik Mine, Serbia
Discuss this preprint
Start a discussion What are Sciety discussions?Listed in
This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.Abstract
Samples of flotation tailings generated during the exploitation and processing of Zn–Pb–Cu–Ag ore from the Rudnik mine (Serbia) were investigated for their mineralogical, geochemical, and magnetic susceptibility properties. The flotation tailings consist of a complex mineral assemblage, including silicates, carbonates, sulfides, phosphates, sulfates, oxides, hydroxides, and native elements. Quartz, calcite, and orthoclase dominate the coarse fraction (>400 µm), accompanied by epidote, Ca-garnet, and Ca-clinopyroxene. Sulfide minerals are concentrated in finer fractions (<400 µm), with pyrite and arsenopyrite being the most abundant, followed by pyrrhotite, sphalerite, galena, and chalcopyrite. These sulfides occur as dispersed grains within a silicate–carbonate matrix. Post-depositional oxidative alteration is moderately developed, with pyrite replaced by hematite, galena by cerussite, and chalcopyrite by malachite. Geochemical analyses reveal that SiO2 (avg. 38.98 wt%), Fe2O3 (avg. 23.68 wt%), Al2O3 (avg. 8.95 wt%), CaO (avg. 9.03 wt%) and MgO (avg. 1.50 wt%) dominate the composition. Economically significant metals include Zn (avg. 0.47 wt%), Pb (avg. 0.20 wt%), Cu (avg. 0.11 wt%), Ag (max. 19 µg/g), and Bi (max. 130 µg/g). Mass magnetic susceptibility shows a strong correlation with S (r = 0.92), Co (r = 0.90), and Bi (r = 0.87); moderate correlation with Fe2O3, Al2O3, and As; and negative correlation with Mn, TiO2, Zn, and Pb. The ferromagnetic phase most likely originates from pyrrhotite, as well as hematite formed during pyrite alteration and goethite.