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The sedimentology of Pleistocene deposits associated with placer gold bearing gravels in the Livingstone Creek area, Yukon Territory
Due to the depletion of traditional economic gold placer deposits in unglaciated areas of the Yukon, the study of the relationship of placer gravels to overlying glacial sediments in ice covered regions is important to future exploration activities. The livingstone Creek area in south central Yukon has supported placer mining operations for over 90 years. Present activity is centred on gold-bearing gravels buried by thick Pleistocene glacial deposits. The placer gravels are associated with coarse interglacial stream and gulch deposits and they are overlain by fine-grained, proximal, glaciolacustrine sediments. During the last glaciation, damming of gold-bearing, high gradient interglacial tributary stream channels by main valley ice caused rapid environmental changes. Depositional processes dominated over erosion in the ice-marginal lakes, and thick sequences of fine-grained suspension deposits, debris flow sediments, and deltaic sands and gravels accumulated. In addition, when glaciers expanded and overrode the area, these thick deposits protected the underlying placer gravels from subglacial erosion and dilution. Subglacial tills were probably deposited by lodgement, meltout and flow. During deglaciation, ice-marginal sedimentation again dominated. Post-glacial streams later cut through the glacial sediments and re-exposed the gold-bearing gravels. Stratigraphic, sedimentologic and geomorphic evidence from the Livingstone Creek area suggests that small tributary valleys, oriented transverse to the former direction of ice flow in the adjacent main valleys would make good exploration targets in regions of new placer interest.
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Early Pleistocene glaciation and implications for placer gold deposits in Back Creek, Mount Nansen area, Yukon
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Yukon has over a century of placer mining history, predominately in unglaciated regions. However, as these targets are exploited, focus turns to more complex landscapes where glaciation has buried, eroded and incorporated placer gold. This study examines how Early Pleistocene glaciation in the Mount Nansen area, central Yukon, has affected placer gold deposits. Detailed stratigraphic analysis and sample collection has focused on Back Creek, where placer mining has exposed a 22 m section with several gold bearing units. In the section, sediment from two glacial advances cap sporadically preserved pre-glacial gravel. The section is variably dissected by younger placer gold bearing fluvial gravel with enrichment related to intersection of inter-glacial or pre-glacial placer gold deposits. Analysis at Back Creek reveals the potential for deeply buried placer gold deposits in other glaciated regions of Yukon.
Glaciation, gravel and gold in the Fifty Mile Creek area, west-central Yukon
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Previously unrecognized glacial erosional landforms (i.e. cirques, u-shaped troughs, truncated spurs and arêtes, in order of increasing doubt), and glacial depositional landforms (i.e. end moraine and possibly ground moraine) occur in the Fifty Mile Creek area, west of the pre-Reid Cordilleran glacial limit. The cirques and end moraine, representing the best evidence of glaciation, are similar to landforms in the adjacent Yukon-Tanana uplands of Alaska and formed during the Eagle glaciation (>40 ka, or Reid in age). Glaciation caused climate-controlled variations in runoff and cycles of aggradation and incision in the Fifty Mile Creek drainage. This resulted in the formation of upper- and lower-level terraces along Fifty Mile Creek and its tributaries. The terraces are composed of slightly muddy, sandy gravel of locally derived lithologies, and are fluvial in origin. Placer gold occurs along Fifty Mile Creek and several of its tributaries, as well as in the lower-level terraces. The upper-level terraces are potentially placer-gold bearing.
Surficial geology and sedimentology of Garner Creek, Ogilvie and Matson Creek map areas (115 O/13, 115 O/12, 115 N/9 - east half)
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The central Yukon Territory has a number of favourable placer deposit settings due to its unique history of multiple glaciations, active stream sedimentation in association with proglacial outwash settings and terrain which has remained unglaciated. Placer gold was found along the Stewart River on point bars in 1884 prior to the discovery of gold in the Klondike area. This was the first indication that the Yukon Territory contained important economic concentrations of placer gold. This study is concerned with the late Tertiary and Quaternary geology in the Lower Stewart River and adjacent Yukon River above Dawson. Previous systematic surficial geological mapping and testing for placer gold on the high-level terraces along these rivers has been limited. This report describes the sedimentology and stratigraphy of key gravelly exposures in this area because similar high-level terraces in the Fortymile River drainage in Alaska had been mined for gold for many years. Work of this type also provides information on the physical characteristics of gravelly deposits (e.g., grain size distribution) which may assist regulatory decisions on placer mining in the lower Stewart and Yukon drainages. Accompanying this report are two 1:50 000-scale surficial geology maps including marginal notes (Garner Creek, NTS 115O/13 and Matson Creek and Ogilvie NTS 115N/9 (east half) and 115O/12), as well as one 1:250 000-scale topographic map (Stewart River - NTS 115N/O) including field study site locations, heavy mineral sample sites and hardrock mineral occurrences.
Sedimentology and stratigraphy of placer gold deposits at Haggart Creek, central Yukon Territory
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The Haggart Creek study area contains unconsolidated sediments, which represent six main geomorphic settings: 1) Reid-age glacial and glaciofluvial deposits; 2) McConnell-age proximal braided stream deposits to periglacial alluvial fans; 3) McConnell-age medial to distal braided stream deposits; 4) post-McConnell wandering gravel bed river; 5) Holocene gulch deposits; and 6) Holocene colluvium. Placer gold within the study area is known to originate from at least two main local lode sources: 1) gold in sheeted quartz veins within a Late Cretaceous-age granodiorite stock; and 2) gold in isolated quartz-sulphide fissure veins found in bedrock along Haggart Creek. Placer gold is believed to have formed as a result of reworking and re-concentration of gold during interglacial times, as well as reworking of older auriferous interglacial gravel by McConnell-age periglacial alluvium. The primary setting for placer gold deposits is Late McConnell to Early Holocene alluvium, on or near bedrock. Sub-crystalline to crystalline placer gold grains recovered from sediments found far removed from currently known local bedrock sources suggests that other lode sources may be present within the study area. A copy of this thesis is available at the EMR library – QE195.W47 1999. This thesis is available online at http://hdl.handle.net/1880/25379.
New data on the geology and mineralization of the Skukum Creek gold-silver deposit, southern Yukon (NTS 105D/3).
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Detailed exploration conducted during 2006 in the western part of the Skukum Creek deposit has revealed new structural, mineralogical and geochemical features. The deposit incorporates a number of (at least six or seven) sub- parallel narrow mineralized zones, coincident with andesite-dacite-rhyolite dyke swarms extending for at least 1 km along strike and for hundreds of metres down-dip. Various mineralized zones differ in size, structural setting, intensity and composition of mineralization, and, in total, form a large mineralized package more than 200 m wide, corresponding to a property- to district-scale fault zone extending for over 10 km and traced by a dyke belt. Significant potential exists for the exploration of these structures along strike and down-dip. The diamond drilling intersected numerous high-grade intercepts of gold and silver mineralization corresponding to the low-sulphidation sub-type of epithermal gold-silver deposits. However, strong enrichment in base metals (up to 25% of combined Zn+Pb+Cu) and arsenic suggests essential differences from typical epithermal mineralized systems.
Geology and geochemistry of the Clear Creek gold occurrences, Tombstone gold belt, central Yukon Territory
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Auriferous sheeted quartz veins and silicified shear zones occur along the margins and within adjacent hornfels zones of mid-Cretaceous Tombstone intrusions near the head of Clear Creek in the central Yukon. The lodes are the source for more than 120,000 ounces of downstream placer gold production. These lodes contain variable amounts pyrrhotite, pyrite, and arsenopyrite, with less abundant scheelite - alkali-feldspar, muscovite, biotite and tourmaline are common gangue phases. Grab samples of mineralization often contain gold grades in excess of 1 ounce per ton. Gold-to-silver ratios vary most commonly from 1:1 to 5:1. Gold-rich quartz veins cut all stocks, adjacent hornfels and associated lamprophyre dykes commonly contain greater than 1% arsenic. Bismuth, and less consistently tungsten and stibnite, characterize many of the most highly mineralized veins within and surrounding the stocks. Quartz veins along the intrusive-metasedimentary rock contact around the Pukelman stock are also enriched in lead and silver. R-mode factor analysis of multi-element geochemical data for 111 gold- and sulphide-bearing rock samples indicates that there are two geochemically distinct metal suites in the Clear Creek occurrences. The first is characterized by As-Au-Bi ± Sb, Te ore-related mineral association, which is typical of many intrusion-related deposits in the Tombstone gold belt. Less consistently, anomalous concentrations of Ag, Co, Cu, Fe, and Mo occur within these auriferous rocks. The second metal factor is defined by Ag-Bi-Pb ± As, Au and Te. It characterizes metalliferous vein samples that have uncommonly low Au: Ag ratios and may represent a second hydrothermal episode. Tungsten shows little consistent correlation with the metalliferous veins in either element suite.
Sedimentology of a high level terrace placer gold deposit, Klondike Valley, Yukon
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Significant economic concentrations of placer gold were first recognized in an intermediate level terrace near Dawson City in the late 1980's Regional surficial mapping has shown the distribution of many high level terraces of pre-Reid, Reid and McConnell age in central Yukon, but the relationship between economic gold concentration and terraces is not well understood. Sedimentological study of an intermediate level terrace near Dawson City suggests two river types have been dominant:: the first, a 'wandering gravel bed river' is characterized by moderate sinuosity, later accretion deposits, limited sand facies, and generally fine gravel; the second, 'proximal braided river' is characterized by multiple channels, very thick and crudely imbricate gravel, low bed relief, and a maximum particle size greater than the underlying wandering gravel bed river deposits. The gold-bearing 'wandering gravel bed river' assemblage is typical of present-day conditions with river processes dominated by lateral migration and high gravel transport rates through the system, conducive to heavy mineral concentration during an interglacial period. The 'proximal braided river' is characteristic of nearby glacial ice and rapid sedimentation resulting in poor heavy mineral concentration. The transition from a wandering gravel bed river to a proximal braided river is suggested to mark the onset of a pre-Reid glaciation in the Southern Ogilvie Mountains. The sedimentology of the intermediate terrace gravels suggests a geomorphic model which may be used for exploration of terrace placer deposits in central Yukon with a similar pattern of regional glaciation influencing terrace formation.
Placer deposits of the Yukon: overview and potential for new discoveries
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Historic placer mining areas in Yukon can be grouped into ten areas: Klondike; Sixtymile; Fortymile; Clear Creek; Moosehorn Range; Stewart River; Clear Creek; Mayo; Dawson Range; and Livingstone Creek. Each area has its own geomorphic setting and depositional history which is related to its glacial history. Several Quaternary glacial advances have been described in Yukon, and these are generally divided into three episodes, commonly known as the pre-Reid, Reid and McConnell, in order of oldest to most recent. Placer deposit in the unglaciated Klondike, Sixtymile, Fortymile and Moosehorn drainages occur in valley-bottoms, alluvial fans, in gulch gravels and as high level terraces. Placer deposits in glaciated areas occur in variably reworked and buried valley-bottom, bench and gulch settings, in auriferous glacial till and glaciofluvial gravels, and in non-glacial gravels which were deposited on top of glacial drift. Targets for new placer deposits in unglaciated areas include drainages such as Stewart, North Ladue and Yukon Rivers which lie outside of the pre-Reid glacial limit. Mineable placer deposits may also have formed on top of pre-Reid glacial drift and may be buried in valleys beneath Reid-age non-glacial alluvium. Prospective areas of this type are drainages which are near lode gold deposits in the Clear Creek area and in drainages near felsic volcanics in the Dawson Range. At the limits of both the Reid and McConnell glaciations, auriferous pre-glacial or interglacial gravel can often be buried by glacial and glaciofluvial deposits. Low-grade auriferous glaciofluvial gravel can also be derived form the reworking of pre-glacial gold-bearing gravel. Prospective areas for these types of placer deposits are the South McQuesten River valley and the creeks draining the Ruby Range on the east side of Kluane Lake. Within the McConnell glacial limits, placer deposits may be found in valleys oriented obliquely to the paleoflow direction of the glacial ice. Economic to sub-economic placers may also be found along meltwater channels within the McConnell ice limit. Prospective areas of this type of deposit are the drainages which lie to the north of Livingstone placer camp. The possibilities for new placer mining areas within glaciated areas must be investigated, and new placer gold reserves will undoubtedly be found within these areas. These potential gold deposits may be explored by techniques such as surficial mapping, airphoto interpretation and bulk sampling of potential gold-bearing units.
Preliminary investigations of placer gold settings in Arch Creek, Kluane district, southwestern Yukon
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