Diamond-bearing gravels along the lower Kwango river DRC

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Abstract

Since the mid-1950s the Kwango River has been a major target for alluvial diamonds which are and continue to be mined from its terraces, younger river flats and present-day river channel. The terraces have maximum ages of Early to Middle Pleistocene. Most of the diamonds have been recovered from large diamond placers in and along the Angolan section of this river—the Cuango River. Smaller deposits have been worked further downstream, where the Kwango River forms the international border between Angola and the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), also referred to as the ‘international’ Kwango. The prospecting history of this river goes back to 1906 but a systematic exploration program over the lower Kwango was only initiated in 2005. The application of geophysics to explore the terrace deposits and river flats has been very useful, but a programme of drilling and pitting was required to accurately define gravel and overburden thicknesses, and outline palaeo-channels. A diamond study used to glean information on diamond sizes and characteristics added significant value to the understanding of these alluvial deposits. For most of the international Kwango, terraces and river flats overly aeolian facies of Upper Kwango Group. Basement rocks, providing more favourable sites for diamond concentrations, are only exposed over a relatively short section, just upstream from Tembo. The basal part of the Cretaceous Kwango Group is locally composed of chemically mature gravels with diamonds in economic quantities only proximal to primary sources and no such settings were found in the project area. The size frequency of the diamonds from the international Kwango indicates that these form the distal head of the diamond trail that have been eroded out of the Cretaceous Kwango Group sediments and kimberlites in the Upper Cuango basin in Angola since the Pleistocene. The diamonds below the two major waterfalls along the international Kwango near Tembo, the Guiliame and Francois-Joseph Falls, show a high percentage of breakage and a decline in average diamond size from around 0.25 cts/stn above the falls to between 0.07 and 0.1 cts/stn in the Nzasi Muadi to Kitangu area between 20 km and 130 km below the Falls. However, local variations due to geomorphological influences affect diamond concentrations and sizes. A preliminary assessment of the terrace deposits suggests that these are uneconomic at present using modern mining methods. This is largely due to thick overburden (up to 12 m of sand) combined with thin and hence low-volume, medium-grade basal gravel, and the dominance of small diamonds of lower value.

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De Wit, M. C. J., & Thorose, E. (2015). Diamond-bearing gravels along the lower Kwango river DRC. In Geology and Resource Potential of the Congo Basin (pp. 341–360). Springer Berlin Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-29482-2_16

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