Mining Intelligence and News
Australia

Sanjiv Ridge (Corunna Downs) Mine

Click for more information

Categories

Overview

Mine TypeOpen Pit
StatusActive
Commodities
  • Iron Ore
Mining Method
  • Truck & Shovel / Loader
Production Start... Lock
Mine Life... Lock
SnapshotThe Sanjiv Ridge Direct Shipping Ore (DSO) Project is a multi-pit blending operation.

Stage 1 of the Sanjiv Ridge Project, approved under EPBC 2017/7861 (as varied on 14 December 2021), involves mining five open pits (Split rock, Razorback, Shark Gully, Runway North and Runway South) over a mine life.

Mining is currently underway in the Runway, Shark Gully and Split Rock pits of the Sanjiv Ridge mine.

Stage 2 of the Sanjiv Ridge Project is a satellite operation which includes three open pits, five additional waste rock landforms and a 4 km haul road connecting to Stage 1. Ore will be hauled to Stage 1, to the existing processing centre to produce a further 10 million tonnes of DSO. Stage 2 of the Project was approved under EPBC 2021/8885, published on 5 October 2022.

Owners

SourceSource
CompanyInterestOwnership
Hancock Prospecting Pty. Ltd. 100 % Indirect
The Sanjiv Ridge (Corunna Downs) mine is 100% owned by Atlas Iron Limited.

Atlas Iron Limited was acquired by Hancock Prospecting Pty Ltd, through its wholly-owned subsidiary Redstone Corporation Pty Ltd in December 2018.

Contractors

Lock

- subscription is required.

Deposit type

  • Banded iron formation

Summary:

The Sanjiv Ridge (Corunna Downs) Project comprises five separate deposits: Split Rock, Shark Gully, Glen Herring, Razorback and Runway.

The project area is located within the Kelly and Coongan greenstone belts of the East Pilbara Craton, between the Shaw and Corunna Downs granitoid complexes. The deposits are located in the Cleaverville Formation of the Gorge Creek Group. The Cleaverville Formation hosted high-grade (+60% Fe) deposits at Goldsworthy, Shay Gap, Yarrie and Nimingarra that were mined as early as 1966 but are now closed.

The Cleaverville Formation comprises metamorphosed BIF and cherty BIF together with some interbedded siltstone and chert units and outcrops as a northeast trending plateau extending for some 20 km (Hermawan, 2016). To the north, the Cleaverville Formation and Warrawoona Group are unconformably overlain by the Mount Roe Basalt (the basal unit of the Fortescue Group) and sandstones with beds of conglomerate of Croydon Group, Lalla Rookh Sandstone.

Mineralisation
The majority of the mineralisation at Corunna Downs is gœthitic near surface and has probably been formed by supergene processes. This is reflected in the chemistry, which indicates that an overall grade of between 55% Fe and 57% Fe is dominant in the area. The deposits have a hard-cap (hydrated zone) dominated by vitreous gœthite extending to approximately 30 m in some places.

There are some indications that a higher grade, metamorphic mineralisation (hypogene or hydrothermal) may be present. At the Runway deposit, zones of hydrothermal breccia have been identified within the BIF, which may indicate that hypogene alteration of the protolith has occurred. An examination of the chemistry of the deposits indicates that this has not resulted in major post-mineralisation alteration of gœthitic mineralisation to hæmatite (as has occurred elsewhere).

Zones of hæmatitic mineralisation were identified at Split Rock (e.g. CDRC0061, grading 61.1% Fe, 0.130% P and 5.6% LOI from 14 m to 48 m) and Glen Herring (e.g. CDRC0366, grading 62.7% Fe, 0.078% P and 7.8% LOI from 64 m to 104 m). However, these zones were rare, and apart from a few isolated grades above 60% Fe, most were lower grade.

The structure of the Sanjiv Ridge (Corunna Downs) deposits is complex, with four deformation phases recognised (Hermawan, 2016). These are termed D1 to D4, respectively:
• D1: North to north-northeast trending, tight steeply plunging folds associated with bedding plane parallel shear zones. This is the dominant deformation structure across Corunna Downs.
• D2: Sub-vertical tight southeast-trending Z folds.
• D3: Reactivation of a series of northeast-southwest trending faults which offset the earlier Warrawoona Group volcanics and Euro Basalt of the Kelly Group. Believed to relate to the mineralisation.
• D4: Major north-south faulting that offset the D3 structures. One of these offsets the mineralisation at Runway and a second fault offsets the Cleaverville Formation in the north, separating the Glen Herring deposit from the rest of the deposits.

Reserves

Lock

- subscription is required.

Mining Methods

Lock

- subscription is required.

Comminution

Crushers and Mills

Lock

- subscription is required.

Processing

Lock

- subscription is required.

Production

CommodityUnits202320222021
Iron Ore Mt  ....  Subscribe  ....  Subscribe  ....  Subscribe
All production numbers are expressed as lump & fines. * Production numbers were reported as 'Average annual' ** Combined production for Mt Webber Mine and Sanjiv Ridge (Corunna Downs) Mine

Production Costs

Commodity production costs have not been reported.

Heavy Mobile Equipment

Fleet data has not been reported.

Personnel

Mine Management

Job TitleNameProfileRef. Date
....................... Subscription required ....................... Subscription required Subscription required Aug 13, 2024
....................... Subscription required ....................... Subscription required Subscription required Aug 13, 2024
....................... Subscription required ....................... Subscription required Subscription required Aug 13, 2024
....................... Subscription required ....................... Subscription required Subscription required Aug 13, 2024
....................... Subscription required ....................... Subscription required Subscription required Aug 13, 2024

Aerial view:

Lock

- subscription is required.