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File Created: 24-Jul-1985 by BC Geological Survey (BCGS)
Last Edit:  05-Sep-1995 by Gilles J. Arseneau (GJA)

Summary Help Help

NMI
Name HIGH EAGLE, WASHBURN Mining Division Golden
BCGS Map 082K049
Status Showing NTS Map 082K08W
Latitude 050º 25' 28'' UTM 11 (NAD 83)
Longitude 116º 21' 14'' Northing 5586024
Easting 545896
Commodities Gold, Copper Deposit Types I05 : Polymetallic veins Ag-Pb-Zn+/-Au
Tectonic Belt Omineca Terrane Ancestral North America
Capsule Geology

The High Eagle showing is located 4 kilometres south of Mount Nelson, at 1677 metres elevation north of Delphine Creek in the Golden Mining Division.

Regionally, the area is underlain by Proterozoic clastic sedimentary rocks of the Purcell and Windermere supergroups and by lower Paleozoic strata of the Beaverfoot and Mount Forster formations (Geoscience Map 1995-1).

The Purcell Supergroup strata include the Aldridge, Creston, Kitchener, Dutch Creek and Mount Nelson formations. The Windermere Supergroup unconformably overlies the Purcell Supergroup rocks and includes the Toby Formation and Horsethief Creek Group (Paper 1990-1).

In the vicinity of the occurrence, rocks of the Kitchener and Dutch Creek formations have been further subdivided and assigned to the Van Creek and Gateway formations. The Van Creek Formation correlates with the Lower Kitchener Formation while the Gateway Formation is equivalent to the lower portion of the Dutch Creek Formation. The Mount Nelson Formation has been subdivided into seven discrete members, a lower quartzite, a lower dolomite, a middle dolomite, a purple dolomite, an upper middle dolomite, an upper quartzite, and an upper dolomite (Open File 1990-26).

Rocks of the Horsethief Creek Group, Beaverfoot and Mount Forster formations are folded and overthrusted by rocks of the upper portion of the Dutch Creek Formation and the lower members of the Mount Nelson Formation. The sedimentary rocks have undergone regional metamorphism to at least greenschist facies.

The occurrence consists of a 3 metre wide quartz vein that contains pyrite and minor amounts of chalcocite, malachite and azurite. The vein is at the contact between orange weathering dolomite and argillite of the Gateway Formation. The prospect has been explored with a 20 metre long adit and a five metre deep shaft. A grab sample from the vein assayed 7 grams per tonne gold (Assessment Report 9362).

Bibliography
EMPR AR 1899-595; 1903-103
EMPR ASS RPT *9362, 12893
EMPR EXPL 1984-92
EMPR FIELDWORK 1989, pp. 29-37
EMPR GEOS MAP 1995-1
EMPR OF 1990-26
EMPR PF (82KSE General File - Geology map by P. Billingsley, 1958)
GSC MAP 1326A
GSC MEM 369
Pope, A.J. (1989): The Tectonics and Mineralization of the Toby- Horsethief Creek Area, Purcell Mountains, Southeast British Columbia, Canada, unpublished Ph.D. Thesis, University of London, England

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