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File Created: 24-Jul-1985 by BC Geological Survey (BCGS)
Last Edit:  19-Aug-2009 by George Owsiacki (GO)

Summary Help Help

NMI
Name BETTY (L. 11335), BETTY FR. (L.11334), OLD TIMER (L. 11337) Mining Division Cariboo
BCGS Map 093A083
Status Showing NTS Map 093A14W
Latitude 052º 51' 19'' UTM 10 (NAD 83)
Longitude 121º 26' 08'' Northing 5857318
Easting 605338
Commodities Gold, Silver Deposit Types I01 : Au-quartz veins
Tectonic Belt Omineca Terrane Barkerville
Capsule Geology

The geology of the region consists of (?)Hadrynian to Paleozoic Snowshoe Group rocks. The Snowshoe Group is an assemblage of dominantly metasedimentary rocks within the Barkerville Terrane of south-central British Columbia. The metasedimentary rocks consist primarily of marble, quartzite and phyllite. In the Yanks Peak area these rocks comprise the Keithley and Harveys Ridge successions but further to the east they remain undifferentiated. Metamorphism of the region varies from chlorite to sillimanite and higher grade. Gold bearing quartz veins occur only in greenschist facies rocks.

The Betty showing consists of gold and locally abundant pyrite in a northerly striking quartz vein hosted by argillaceous schist. Based on observations of similar veins in the area, gold is presumably associated with the pyrite. A grab sample of a sulphide-rich zone assayed 8.43 grams per tonne gold and 2.74 grams per tonne silver (Minister of Mines Annual Report 1933, page A137).

The hostrock has been mapped as "Midas Formation" (Campbell, 1978 - Geological Survey of Canada Open File Map 574) but was remapped as undifferentiated Snowshoe Group (possibly the Harveys Ridge succession) by Struik in 1988 (Geological Survey of Canada Memoir 421).

In 1954, Snowshoe Gold Mines Limited owned Lots 11332 to 11346. These fifteen Crown-granted claims are near the head of Luce Creek on the north side of the valley, due north of Yanks Peak. They were formerly known as the Jane group. On their eastern side they adjoin the Jim group, and on the southeast the Midas (093A 035). In 1862, a quartz vein was discovered on ground which is now included in the Old Timer claim (Lot 11337, 093A 030). This, the first quartz vein found in the Keithley Creek district, was discovered by Thomas Haywood and Edward Jeffrey, who named it the Douglas vein. Later, it has been known as either the Haywood vein or the Arrastre vein. Haywood drove a 27-metre adit to intersect the vein below its outcrop and that an arrastre built on the ground was unprofitably worked by William Luce on quartz from the vein. In 1886, after Haywood's death, the ground was relocated by Veith and Borland, who cleaned out the old adit and shipped some quartz for a test. There is no record of work having been done for many years after 1887. The claims lapsed in the interval and were relocated by R. Reinhold in 1928. In 1933, the group was under option to Island Mountain Mines Company Limited, for which Reinhold drove a short adit on the south side of Luce Creek near the northeast corner of the Betty Fraction (Lot 11334). Reinhold and partners optioned the Jane group to F.M. Wells, who in 1937 organized Snowshoe Gold Mines Limited. The company built a camp and in 1938 began underground exploration which continued into 1939. The Old Timer property was idle in 1940, and in 1941 Pioneer Gold Mines of B.C. Limited took an option on the property and did some underground exploration. Work by the Pioneer company ceased in January, 1942, and since then no further work has been done. In 1981, Suncor Inc. optioned the Yanks Peak property from Zelon Enterprises Ltd. The property covers the Betty showing and others. Exploration programs were conducted in the summers of 1981-82. In 1984, the exploration program included grid establishment, geophysical and geochemical surveys, and geological mapping.

Bibliography
EMPR AR 1933-A137
EMPR ASS RPT 10269, 10775, 11194, *13663
EMPR ASS RPT SUM 1981-249
EMPR BULL 34, pp. 40,43,50,79
EMPR EXPL 1982-273; 1985-C279
EMPR OF 2001-11; 2004-12
GSC MAP 59-1959; 1424A; 1538G
GSC MEM 421
GSC OF 574; 844
EMPR PFD 600044

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