Geology and mineralization of the AurMac metasediment-hosted gold deposits, central Yukon (NTS 105M/13)
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The AurMac property, located 35 km north of Mayo in central Yukon, includes two metasedimentary rock-hosted gold deposits: the 6158 koz Au Powerline deposit and the 845 koz Au Airstrip deposit. Mineralization at the Powerline and Airstrip deposits is characterized by gold in sheeted quartz veins and mineralized skarn horizons, respectively. The AurMac deposits straddle the Robert Service thrust fault whereby the Powerline deposit is hosted in the Late Proterozoic to Cambrian Hyland Group hanging wall, and the Airstrip deposit is hosted in the Mississippian Sourdough Hill Member of the Keno Hill Quartzite footwall. Host rocks comprise siliciclastic metasedimentary rocks, variably calc-silicate–altered calcareous metasedimentary rocks and magmatic rocks. Magmatic rocks in the Powerline zone consist of foliated mafic horizons that are geochemically similar to Cambro-Ordovician magmatic rocks found in Hyland Group metasedimentary rocks in the McQuesten, Mayo, Clark Lakes and Hart River map areas. In the Airstrip zone, magmatic rocks include a steeply south-dipping, unfoliated, aplite dike. Evidence for intrusion-related gold mineralization at AurMac includes sheeted vein and skarn mineralization similar to the intrusionhosted, intrusion-related gold deposits at Dublin Gulch, as well as the presence of metamorphic porphyroblast assemblages that suggest contact metamorphism. These findings suggest potential for further discovery of mineralized intrusion-hosted zones on the AurMac property and sedimenthosted, intrusion-related gold deposits elsewhere in the region.
Geology of Mt. Nansen (115I/3) and Stoddart Creek (115I/6), Dawson Range, Central Yukon
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The Mount Nansen and Stoddart Creek map areas (NTS 115 I/3, 6) are in the southern part of the Dawson Range. They contain a number of porphyry and vein related mineral occurrences which have been undergoing extensive re-evaluation for precious metals potential. Basement rocks are part of the Yukon Crystalline Terrane and include metamorphosed and deformed sedimentary, volcanic and plutonic rocks of uncertain age. These are intruded by two suites of foliated plutonic rocks, the Upper Triassic to Jurassic Klotassin Suite, mainly hornblende-biotite granodiorite, and the Jurassic Big Creek Suite, including K-feldspar porphyritic syenite, quartz syenite and monzonite. Latest metamorphism of basement rocks is likely related to emplacement of these suites. Latest lower Cretaceous was marked by intrusion of the Dawson Range Batholith, consisting of the regionally exposed Casino Granodiorite and the more localized Coffee Creek Granite. The Mount Nansen Volcanics, mainly andesite with a lesser felsic component, are possibly cogenetic with these intrusives. Numerous intermediate to felsic porphyry stocks and dikes may be of Mount Nansen age in part, but they are at least in part younger. The Bow Creek Granite is a newly defined, high level, granophyric pluton with related, peripheral quartz-feldspar porphyry dikes. These rocks appear to cut the Mount Nansen volcanics and may be as young as the Carmacks volcanism. The Caribou Creek Conglomerate is a very localized sedimentary sequence which underlies the Carmacks volcanics. The Carmacks Volcanic Suite, uppermost Cretaceous in age, is relatively flat-lying and has been subdivided into three units. The lowermost consists of felsic pyroclastic rocks and associated glassy domes or plugs. The middle unit, which appears to be quite thin in the map area, consists of andesite flows and pyroclastics with minor basalt. The most extensive is the upper unit, which consists mainly of basalt flows. Mineral deposits are of four main types, including porphyries, veins, skarns and placer. Transitional varieties are associated with brecciation and porphyry dike emplacement. The porphyries are low grade copper-molybdenum deposits with local gold enrichment in the upper parts. Breccias with elevated precious metal values occur within the porphyries and also peripherally associated with quartz-feldspar porphyry dikes. Gold and silver-bearing quartz veins occur in dilational fracture systems which are also peripheral to the porphyries. In the presence of calcareous meta-sediments of Yukon Crystalline Terrane, gold-bearing, iron-rich skarns have formed. Base metal-rich veins are rare and distal from the porphyry centres. Mineralization controls are recognised as follows:: 1. Proximity to major regional structures such as the Big Creek Fault and the Minto Linear which extends north-northeasterly through the map area. 2. Local structures, ranging in trend from northwesterly to northeasterly, are important as hydrothermal channelways and vein sites. 3. Presence of a favourable host, including Mount Nansen volcanics, siliceous meta-sediments and Casino Granodiorite. 4. Proximity to porphyry stocks or quartz-feldspar pophyry dikes.
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.
Volcanic-hosted epithermal gold-sulphide mineralization and associated enrichment processes, Sixtymile River area, Yukon Territory, Canada
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The upper Sixtymile River area is located approximately 128 km west of Dawson City, Yukon. Lithology in this area consists of Precambrian to Paleozoic metamorphic rocks, Paleozoic ultramafic rocks, Middle Jurassic pegmatitic and aplitic dikes, Upper Cretaceous porphyritic dikes and volcanic rocks with intercalated sedimentary rocks, Quaternary alkaline basaltic dikes and Quaternary alluvial sediments. Precious metal occurrences in these volcanic rocks are divided into two types, based on differences in local distribution, petrology and wall rock alteration: a gold-bearing pyrite-arsenopyrite type and a silver-bearing galena-sphalerite type. Both types are characterized by four stages of mineralization.
Geology, mineralization and sampling results from the Kalzas tungsten property, central Yukon
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Kalzas, in central Yukon, is a porphyry-style stockwork and sheeted-vein wolframite deposit. Alteration includes a potassic core, a quartz-tourmaline-sericite zone and an outer quartz-sericite-pyrite zone, the latter in excess of 2 km in diameter. Wolframite is confined to the inner two zones, in an oval area 1500 m by 800 m. The wolframite is disseminated within the quartz-tourmaline stockwork and also occurs as coarse crystals in sheeted veins. Mineralization occurs within Neoproterozoic to Early Cambrian Hyland Group quartzites and phyllites, which are likely intruded at depth by a pluton, possibly of the Cretaceous Tombstone Suite. From 1981 to 1984, Union Carbide carried out mapping, soil and rock geochemistry, an airborne magnetometer survey, road building, trenching and drilling of two diamond drill holes. Results from Copper Ridge's 2001 sample program range from 0.3% WO3 to 0.5% WO3 over widths up to 70 m. They demonstrate the potential to define a signifi cant resource of surface-mineable tungsten mineralization at a grade of 0.4% WO3 or better. Drilling is required to confirm grade continuity at depth and along strike.
Geology and mineralization of the Len intrusive-hosted gold prospect, McQuesten area, Yukon
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The Len porphyry gold prospect is located 47 km north of Mayo, Yukon, in the Tombstone Suite intrusive belt. The area was explored as a Keno Hill-style silver prospect in the 1960s and 1970s. An arsenic-in-soil anomaly first identified in 1980 was followed up by soil geochemistry and excavator trenching in 1996. Multiple sheeted quartz-sulphide veins hosted in a previously unmapped granodiorite stock were discovered during the trenching program. A six-hole program of diamond drilling in 1997 encountered grades ranging up to 2.22 g/t gold across 18.6 m, and showed that gold mineralization is dominantly within, but not restricted to, the intrusive stock.
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.
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.