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File Created: 13-Dec-1995 by George Owsiacki (GO)
Last Edit:  09-Jan-2014 by Karl A. Flower (KAF)

Summary Help Help

NMI
Name TSITIKA BLACK, ELLIOT Mining Division Nanaimo
BCGS Map 092L038
Status Showing NTS Map 092L08W
Latitude 050º 18' 59'' UTM 09 (NAD 83)
Longitude 126º 29' 05'' Northing 5576835
Easting 679066
Commodities Granite, Dimension Stone, Building Stone Deposit Types R03 : Dimension stone - granite
Tectonic Belt Insular Terrane Plutonic Rocks, Wrangell
Capsule Geology

The Tsitika Black showing is located on the north- north eastern slopes of Elliot Mountain, approximately 13.5 kilometres north east of Woss.

The area is underlain by rocks of the Vernon Batholith, apart of the Jurassic Island Plutonic Suite. The batholith consists of homogeneous body of medium to coarse grained plutonic rocks ranging from biotite-hornblende quartz diorite to leuco-quartz monzonite.

The rock is found as scattered outcrops and boulder fields in the Tsitika River valley. This stone is a more fractured and darker phase of Tsitika Grey (092L 345). Because of the high fracture density, it has limited use other than for masonry blocks.

Tsitika Black is light black with grey-pink highlights. It is a uniform, fine to medium-grained diorite/gabbro. Major constituents are plagioclase, biotite and clinopyroxene (augite). Minor constituents are chlorite, magnetite, pyrite (3 per cent), quartz and apatite. Pyroxene is strongly altered to chlorite, biotite is generally unaltered and plagioclase shows weak albitization. Pyrite is fresh and unaltered. The rock takes a good polish (8/10) and has minor pitting on biotite. The rock has a well developed planar fabric but no visible alteration or staining. There is no macroscopic fracturing and only minor microfracturing of primarily plagioclase.

In 1996, Mammoth Geological completed a program of test splitting and sampling of the available rock at the discovery outcrop. The program identified that the stone readily splits along grain into 10 centimetre split faces. The stone was also reported to take a “good” polish with few signs of pitting or micro-fracturing (Assessment Report 24425).

Bibliography
EMPR ASS RPT *24425
EMPR EXPL 1992, pp.107-116
EMPR FIELDWORK 1994, pp. 365-369; *1996, pp. 301-306
GSC MAP 1836A
GSC OF 9; 170; 463
Streckeisen, A. (1976): To Each Plutonic Rock its Proper Name; Earth
and Science Reviews, Volume 12, pages 1-33.

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