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File Created: 24-Jul-1985 by BC Geological Survey (BCGS)
Last Edit:  16-Jan-2004 by Robert H. Pinsent (RHP)

Summary Help Help

NMI
Name SILVER CUP Mining Division Revelstoke
BCGS Map 082K064
Status Showing NTS Map 082K11W
Latitude 050º 36' 04'' UTM 11 (NAD 83)
Longitude 117º 20' 50'' Northing 5605526
Easting 475427
Commodities Talc, Asbestos Deposit Types E08 : Carbonate-hosted talc
Tectonic Belt Omineca Terrane Ancestral North America
Capsule Geology

The Silver Cup asbestos showing is at 1800 metres elevation on the southwest side of Silver Cup Ridge. It is at the head of Laughton (Eight-Mile) Creek, which flows to the southwest into Trout Lake.

The Trout Lake area is underlain by a thick succession of sedimentary and volcanic rocks of the Badshot Formation and Lardeau Group near the northern end of the Kootenay arc, an arcuate, north to northwest trending belt of Paleozoic and Mesozoic strata that is now classified as a distinct, pericratonic, terrane. The arc rocks are bordered by Precambrian quartzite in the east and they young to the west, where they are bounded by Jurassic-age intrusive complexes. They were deformed during the Antler orogeny in Devonian-Mississippian time and were refolded and faulted during the Columbian orogeny, in the Middle Jurassic. A large panel, the "Selkirk allochthon", was later offset to the northeast by dip-slip motion along the Columbia River Fault.

The Badshot Formation is composed of a thick Cambrian limestone that is a distinctive marker horizon in the Trout Lake area. It is underlain by Hamill Group quartzite and it is overlain by a younger assemblage of limestone, calcareous, graphitic and siliceous argillite and siltstone, sandstone, quartzite and conglomerate, and also mafic volcanic flows, tuffs and breccias, all of which belong to the Lardeau Group. The rocks are isoclinally folded and intensely deformed, but only weakly metamorphosed. They occur as intercalated beds of marble, quartzite and grey, green and black phyllite and schist. Fyles and Eastwood (EMPR BULL 45) subdivided the group into six formations (Index, Triune, Ajax, Sharon Creek, Jowett and Broadview) of which the lowermost (Index) and uppermost (Broadview) are the most widespread. The Triune (siliceous argillite), Ajax (quartzite) and Sharon Creek (siliceous argillite) are restricted to the Trout Lake area. The Jowett is a mafic volcanic unit.

The area is underlain by schistose mafic tuff and pillow basalt of the Jowett Formation, and by green, gritty, phyllites and schists of the Broadview Formation. The rocks are isoclinally folded, highly deformed and schistose. Bedding and schistocity both strike to the northwest and dip steeply to the northeast.

Showings of brittle amphibole asbestos fibre and pale green micaceous talc were noted in outcrops of rusty talc schist in 1903.

Bibliography
EMPR OF *1988-19, pp. 65,69; 1990-24; *1995-25 p. 84
GSC EG #2, pp. 51,52
GSC MAP 235A
GSC MEM 161 pp. 111-112
GSC SUM RPT 1903, p. 80A

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