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File Created: 24-Jul-1985 by BC Geological Survey (BCGS)
Last Edit:  29-Aug-2007 by Sarah Meredith-Jones (SMJ)

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NMI 082K9 Pb1, K16 Pb
Name ISAAC (L.5344) Mining Division Golden
BCGS Map 082K068
Status Past Producer NTS Map 082K09W
Latitude 050º 41' 23'' UTM 11 (NAD 83)
Longitude 116º 27' 37'' Northing 5615461
Easting 538124
Commodities Silver, Lead, Gold, Zinc Deposit Types I05 : Polymetallic veins Ag-Pb-Zn+/-Au
Tectonic Belt Omineca Terrane Ancestral North America
Capsule Geology

The Isaac property is located near the head of Isaac Creek, a northerly flowing tributary of Frances Creek.

The Isaac claim (Lot 5344) was located by H.E. Forster in about 1900 and Crown-granted in 1904. Mr. Forster worked the claim intermittently until 1919 when Paul Denhart, of Seattle, purchased the property. Intermittent operations were continued and in 1921, W.D. McMillan purchased the property. In 1922, the property consisted of 5 claims, the Isaac Crown-granted claim and Isaac Nos. 1, 2, 3 and Isaac Extension, owned by J. Rutherford and associates.

Invermere Mines, Limited, operated the property in 1923. Development work to 1923 consisted of 2 inclined shafts sunk on the vein. The ore shaft is about 4.6 metres and the other is about 17 metres deep. Two 4.6-metre drifts were run on the vein from the deep shaft, one to the southeast at the 10.7 metre level, and the other to the northwest at the bottom of the shaft.

From 1916 to 1924 (not including 1919, 1921 and 1922), 431 tonnes of ore were shipped and 408,164 grams of silver and 151,801 kilograms of lead were recovered.

The Isaac showing is hosted in limestone and quartzite schist of the the Middle Proterozoic Mount Nelson Formation, Purcell Supergroup.

A vein striking 130 degrees and dipping 65 degrees southwest, follows the strike of the formation and varies in width from about 0.46 to 1.2 metres. Galena, with small amounts of pyrite, occurs in the veins as disseminations, bunches and stringers. Mineralization is exposed on the surface for a distance of about 107 metres south of the workings. A greenstone (dolerite) dike occurs just south of the showing but is thought to predate the mineralization.

A sample of the material assayed 6.86 grams per tonne gold, 987.44 grams per tonne silver, 54.6 per cent lead and 3 per cent zinc (Minister of Mines Annual Report 1922, page 184).

Bibliography
EMPR AR 1900-807; 1903-105; 1904-114,295; 1913-187; 1915-82,106;
1916-187,516; 1917-147,178,447; 1918-185; 1919-113,146;
1920-115,139; 1921-125,165; *1922-184; 1923-200
EMPR PRELIM MAP 22; 62
EM GEOFILE 2003-2
GSC MAP 2070; 12-1957; 1326A
GSC MEM 148; 369
GSC OF 341; 551
GSC SUM RPT *1925A, p. 228
EMPR PFD 861996

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