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File Created: 24-Jul-1985 by BC Geological Survey (BCGS)
Last Edit:  31-Aug-2007 by Sarah Meredith-Jones (SMJ)

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NMI 083D13 Mic1
Name MICA MOUNTAIN, BARRON 1-4, BONANZA GROUP, BONANZA, PREMIER, MINNIE SMITH, DREADNOT, ADVENTURE, BOULDER, MAMMOTH, MICA, TETE JAUNE, RELIANCE CLAIM GRP. Mining Division Cariboo
BCGS Map 083D083
Status Showing NTS Map 083D13E
Latitude 052º 53' 56'' UTM 11 (NAD 83)
Longitude 119º 32' 48'' Northing 5864060
Easting 328709
Commodities Mica, Kyanite, Beryllium Deposit Types O03 : Muscovite pegmatite
P02 : Kyanite-sillimanite schists
Tectonic Belt Omineca Terrane Kootenay, Ancestral North America
Capsule Geology

The Mica Mountain showing is located on the northern and eastern flanks of Mica Mountain between 2072 and 2487 metres, Tete Jaune Cache is approximately 10 kilometres to the northeast.

Mica Mountain has a long history of mica and lesser kyanite prospecting and exploration recorded as far back as 1898. At various times a number of attempts have been made to develop properties on Mica Mountain, but the showings to date contain too low a proportion of sheet mica of marketable grade to permit profitable operation (Minister of Mines Annual Report 1947). Work on these claims consisted primarily of short adits, winces and trenches along and into pegmatite bodies.

Mica at these old showings is hosted in pegmatite dykes and sills. Sills are transposed and deformed with host lithologies, whereas dykes crosscut foliation and folds of host rocks. Based on crosscutting relations, pegmatite bodies were intruded prior to and after phase three deformation. Phase three deformation consists of variable developed crenulation cleavages on a micro and mesoscopic scale and open to tight, isoclinal folds (coaxial with phase two folds) on a meso and megascopic scale. These later pegmatites have small apophyses into host lithologies, which show no evidence of strain. Pegmatites are hosted in pelitic schists of the Hadrynian lower Kaza Group. Schists are largely mica-garnet, quartz-mica, quartz-feldspar-mica in composition. Other lithologies of the lower Kaza Group include psammite, amphibolite, marble and calc-silicate. The Canoe South Mica showing (083D 017) contains a more detailed description of the regional deformation and conditions of metamorphism in the area. The age of pegmatites has been determined as being 154+/-6 Ma and 125+/-7 Ma for pre and post phase three deformation pegmatites, respectively.

Quartz, feldspar and muscovite comprise the main constituents of the pegmatites. Accessories include garnet, tourmaline, kyanite, beryl and apatite. Pegmatites are commonly irregular and lens-like bodies, most frequently oriented 135 degrees and dipping 30 to 40 degrees to the southwest. Textures within these bodies vary greatly with only certain mica bands large enough to be of commercial value (Minister of Mines Annual Report 1920). Where muscovite is of good quality, it is light brown to light greenish and occurs in well formed booklets ranging from 10 by 10 by 1.25 centimetres to 45 by 30 by 5 centimetres; however, the quantities in any one pegmatite is not unusually high (Geological Survey of Canada Economic Geology Report No. 19). In certain pegmatites, muscovite was noted to be the best quality and of the greatest abundance in small pockets near the hanging wall (Minister of Mines Annual Reports 1899, 1913). Elsewhere, quality muscovite was observed concentrated in bands up to 1.5 metres wide on either side of the hanging or foot walls (Assessment Report 276).

Beryl was reported in pegmatite on the Bonanza property on Mica Mountain by McEvoy (Minister of Mines Annual Report 1898) and deScmid (Minister of Mines Annual Report 1913). Lay (Minister of Mines Annual Report 1928) found no trace of beryl or any other unusual accessory mineral. But a composite sample was reported (GSC spetrographic analyses) to contain less than 0.01 per cent beryllium (Geological Survey of Canada, Economic Geology Report No. 23).

Bibliography
EMPR AR 1888-313; 1893-80A-81A; *1898-39; 1912-K52-K53; *1913-K59;
1914-K56-K57; 1915-K54-K55; *1920-N95-N96; 1921-N95,N96; 1924-152;
*1928-C188-C189; 1931-A148-A149; *1947-A215-A216,A220
EMPR ASS RPT *276
EMPR OF 1988-26
EMPR PF (*Report on the Bonanza Mica Property, Mica Mtn., Tete Jaune,
B.C., J.M. Cummings, 1941)
GSC EC GEOL *No. 19, pp. 83-84,90; *No. 23, pp. 58, 60
GSC MAP 15-1967, 1339A
GSC OF 2324
GSC P *60-21, p. 9; 89-1E, pp. 101-107; 90-1E, pp. 71-80
EMPR PFD 5228, 5229, 5230

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