The Hungry Creek (Ridge) occurrence is located at approximately 2030 metres elevation on a north-facing slope, south of Hungry Creek and approximately 4.6 kilometres southwest of the creeks’ junction with the St. Mary River.
Regionally, the area is underlain by sedimentary units belonging to the Mesoproterozoic Purcell Basin (Purcell Supergroup). They include clastic and lesser carbonate rocks with minor mafic sills. The basal unit in the area is the deep water, quartzitic Aldridge Formation, overlain by shallow water clastic rocks of the Creston Formation that in turn are overlain by platformal Kitchener Formation clastic and carbonate rocks. The area is along the west limb of the Purcell anticline, a broad north-plunging fold structure that cores the Purcell Basin. Beds generally strike north-northeast and dip moderately to steeply west. The area is bracketed to the west by the north-northeast–trending Redding Creek fault and to the east by the north-northeast–trending Hall Lake fault. The area has been intruded by numerous Middle to Late Cretaceous granitic bodies that seal the major north-northeast faults.
Locally, the area is primarily underlain by medium-bedded phyllitic siltite and lesser slaty/schistose quartzites of the Mesoproterozoic Creston Formation. Iron carbonate minerals and calcite are locally present to abundant within some of these units as well as disseminated magnetite and ubiquitous sericite±chlorite. To the southwest, a fault slice of the Mesoproterozoic Kitchener Formation is exposed and comprises calcareous siltite and silty quartzite with some stromatolites. Immediately west of these units is a thick sequence of black phyllitic argillite with some interbeds of thick tabular siltite. Foliated, generally magnetic greenstone bodies are abundant on the claim block intruding all the stratigraphic units. They tend to be sill like but also occur as boudinaged strands within bedding-subparallel structural zones. They range in thickness from 30 centimetres to upwards of 10 metres thick. The area has been intruded by unfoliated gabbroic breccia to intermediate feldspar porphyry dikes, occurring in close spatial relationship to unfoliated quartz-eye porphyry to aphanitic felsic dikes. Contacts of both dikes are not well exposed; however, they generally trend north-northeast subparallel to bedding.
Mineralization is comprised of a quartz-eye porphyry dike hosting disseminated arsenopyrite along with thin, up to 0.1 metre wide, quartz veins with poddy pyrite-galena±arsenopyrite. The veins trend from 130 to 150 degrees with a dip of 20 to 70 degrees east.
In 2019, three samples (HMK-01 to -03) yielded from 38.9 to 71.3 grams per tonne silver and 1.83 to 2.77 per cent lead (Assessment Report 39212).
Work History
In 2011, Bethpage Capital Corp. conducted a 479.1 line-kilometre airborne geophysical survey on the area as part of the Hall Lake property. In 2013, Eagle Plains Resources Ltd. conducted a program of geological mapping and geochemical (rock, silt and soil) sampling on the Hall Lake property.
In 2019 and 2020, DLC Resources Inc. completed programs of prospecting, geological mapping, geochemical (rock, silt and soil) sampling and 15.4 line-kilometres of ground magnetic and electromagnetic surveys on the area as the Hungry Creek property. In 2021, DLP Resources Inc. completed a 233.7 line-kilometre airborne magnetic and electromagnetic survey and two diamond drill holes, totalling 826.6 metres, on the Hungry Creek property. In 2022, DLP Resources Inc. conducted a further program of prospecting and rock sampling on the property. In 2024 DLP Resources Inc. conducted a regional reconnaissance prospecting program on the property.