El Sherana


El Sherana is an abandoned uranium mine in the South Alligator River Valley of the Northern Territory, Australia.
The deposit was discovered in 1954 by a United Uranium NL exploration team, led by Joe Fischer, with a ground radiometric survey. The site was named after the daughters of a team staff member, William 'Bluey' Halpin Kay - Elvira, Sherryl and Lana. El Sherana operated from 1958 to 1959 and El Sherana West from 1961 to 1964. The site was rehabilitated between 1988 and 1992.
El Sherana was the largest producer of high grade uranium ore amongst the mines along the South Alligator River Valley. It had underground and open-cut operations. Production from El Sherana was 38,437 long tons at a grade of 12.42 lb U3O8 per long ton. From El Sherana West, 21,316 long tons at a grade of 18.35 lb U3O8 per long ton were produced.
At El Sherana and El Sherana West, uranium-gold mineralisation occurs in two general settings:
at or near the shallow-dipping Koolpin Formation/Coronation Sandstone unconformity, where it is cut by normal and reverse faults. The host rocks are chert-banded siltstone and carbonaceous shale adjacent to sandstone and altered volcanics, in irregular zones along the contacts between cherty ferruginous shale and carbonaceous shale. The ore consisted of massive pods and disseminated veinlets of pitchblende, with secondary metatorbernite, autunite, gummite and gold, with minor pyrite, galena and chalcopyrite. Gold occurred as veinlets within pitchblende or as separate zones of mineralisation. Gold distribution extends beyond the high grade pitchblende pods that in places contain visible gold and forms an envelope around the poddy high grade uranium mineralisation, with grades of up to 0.2 ounce per ton.