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File Created: 31-Mar-1989 by George Owsiacki (GO)
Last Edit:  15-Aug-1996 by Keith J. Mountjoy (KJM)

Summary Help Help

NMI
Name ADVANCE FR. (L.3834S), INVASION FR. (L.3833S), LYON-ADVANCE Mining Division Greenwood
BCGS Map 082E045
Status Past Producer NTS Map 082E06E
Latitude 049º 25' 13'' UTM 11 (NAD 83)
Longitude 119º 04' 49'' Northing 5476258
Easting 349133
Commodities Silver, Lead, Zinc Deposit Types I05 : Polymetallic veins Ag-Pb-Zn+/-Au
Tectonic Belt Omineca Terrane Plutonic Rocks, Harper Ranch
Capsule Geology

The Advance Fraction (Lot 3834s) prospect is located 3.75 kilometres west of the summit of Mount Wallace and 2 kilometres south of Beaverdell, British Columbia (Assessment Report 16772). Initial prospecting began in the Beaverdell area in the late 1880s. The first ore was shipped in 1896. The major producing mines in the Beaverdell silver-lead-zinc vein camp, from west to east, were the Wellington (082ESW072), Sally and Rob Roy (082ESW073), Beaver (082ESW040), and Bell (082ESW030), with numerous other small workings throughout the area.

The first recorded work on the Advance Fraction occurrence was in 1927, which consisted of a couple of months of development work. In 1937, the property was owned by J. Southern and had been worked by several lessees for some time. In 1938, Lyon-Advance syndicate mined 3 tonnes of ore. Since 1946, work has been intermittent and ownership has changed several times: 1946 - Silver Bounty Mines Ltd., 1958 - Sheritt-Lee Mines Ltd., 1963 - Ruby Silver Mines Ltd., 1971 - Copper Bounty Mines Ltd. and 1983 - Walmont Precious Metals Corp. The occurrence is currently owned by IGF Metals Inc. The Invasion- Advance Fraction vein has been explored and sampled by IGF Metals Inc. Past development includes several adits and a shaft.

Granodiorite of the Westkettle batholith underlies most of the area. It has been intruded by small quartz monzonite porphyry stocks including the Eocene Beaverdell, Tuzo Creek, Eugene Creek and Carmi stocks. Other granitic porphyry stocks that intrude the Westkettle batholith are the Eocene Beaverdell porphyry. The Westkettle batholith has been correlated with the Nelson intrusions that have been dated by potassium-argon and uranium-lead methods as Middle Jurassic. The Westkettle batholith contains remnants of pendants and/or screens of metamorphosed Wallace Formation. The Wallace Formation is believed to be correlative with the upper (Permian) section of the Carboniferous to Permian Anarchist Group. Lithologies include metamorphosed andesitic tuffs and lavas, hornblende diorite porphyries, olivine gabbro and hornblendite, hornfels and minor limestone. The contact between the Wallace Formation and the Westkettle batholith is sinuous, trending north with gentle east dips. These are unconformably overlain by Oligocene tuffs and conglomerates and Miocene plateau basalts. Westkettle granodiorite or Beaverdell quartz monzonite are the dominant hostrocks. Mineralization rarely extends into the Wallace Formation to the east. A series of dikes, ranging in composition from quartz latite and quartz monzonite porphyries to hornblende andesite porphyries, are found throughout the area. In the Beaverdell camp, fine-grained, brown andesite dikes, referred to as Wellington-type dikes, are believed to be pre-mineralization. Quartz latite dikes are referred to as Idaho-type dikes and thought to be syn or post-mineralization.

Beaverdell silver-rich veins are found in a 3.0 by 0.8 kilometre belt, referred to as the Beaverdell silver-lead-zinc vein camp. The mineralized veins are fissure-hosted, formed along east-trending faults in the west portion of the Beaverdell camp and northeast- trending faults in the east portion of the camp. Faults have been classified into five types based on their orientation, with each type having common orientation, kind of movement and age relationship. The northeast-striking, high-angle normal faults pose the greatest obstacle to systematic exploration and mining, as these faults are commonly spaced a few metres apart dividing veins into short segments in a northwest-downward direction.

Vein-type mineralization of the Beaverdell camp is characterized by a high silver content. Mineralization is composed of galena, sphalerite and pyrite with lesser amounts of arsenopyrite, tetrahedrite, pyrargyrite, chalcopyrite, polybasite, acanthite, native silver and pyrrhotite. The gangue minerals in veins are mainly quartz with lesser amounts of calcite, fluorite and sericite with rare barite.

The Advance Fraction (Lot 3834s) and Invasion Fraction (Lot 3833s) adjoin the Nodaway claim (082ESW068) in the northeast. The property is underlain by Westkettle batholith granodiorite. A pyritic quartz vein occupies an intensely altered, iron stained and friable shear zone that trends east with moderate to steep dips to the south. Silver values with low gold occur. Channel sample #32 taken over 0.20 metre of this shear zone in 1987 yielded 15.9 grams per tonne silver (Assessment Report 16772).

In 1938, 20,372 grams of silver, 287 kilograms of lead and 315 kilograms of zinc were recovered from 3 tonnes of ore mined.

Bibliography
EMPR AR 1927-C405; 1936-D57; 1937-D35; 1938-A34; 1946-A134; 1947- A153; 1948-A126; 1949-A138-A143
EMPR INDEX 3-204
EMPR BC METAL MM00892
EMPR ASS RPT *16772
EMPR OF 1989-5
GSC MEM *79
GSC OF 481; 637; 1505A; 1565; 1969
GSC P 37-21
CJES Vol. 19, No. 6, pp. 1264-1274, 1984
Watson, P.H. (1981): Genesis and Zoning of Silver-Gold Veins in the Beaverdell Area, south-central British Columbia, M.Sc. Thesis, University of British Columbia, 156 pp.
EMPR PFD 752947

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