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

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NMI 093A14 Au5
Name IMPERIAL, GORRIE, ASTER, RIDGE Mining Division Cariboo
BCGS Map 093A083
Status Prospect NTS Map 093A14W
Latitude 052º 52' 28'' UTM 10 (NAD 83)
Longitude 121º 25' 59'' Northing 5859454
Easting 605459
Commodities Gold 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. The metasedimentary rocks consist mainly of marble, quartzite and phyllite which in the area of the showing comprise the Downey succession. Metamorphism of the region varies from chlorite to sillimanite and higher grade. Mineral deposits of the region are generally confined to greenschist facies rocks.

The Imperial vein outcrops at an elevation of 1813 metres on the east side of Aster-Breakneck Ridge, about 22 kilometres south of Barkerville. The vein is in Midas Formation (Snowshoe Group) black silty quartzite close to its western contact with Snowshoe Group basal conglomerate and lower grey quartzite which lie to the west. The vein is on the western flank of the anticline that extends southward from the head of Aster Creek.

The Imperial vein is a quartz vein which has been traced over a length of 335 metres. The vein strikes 005 degrees and dips vertically to steeply eastward and occupies a strong fault zone which cuts across the enclosing quartzite. The vein is exposed in trenches and natural exposures for a length of about 335 metres. The largest segment of vein exposed is an outcrop of white quartz 30 metres long and 13 metres wide; in trenches it ranges from 1.8 to 3.9 metres wide.

The dump of an adit near the southern end of the vein, now caved, contains quartz pitted with cavities from weathering of pyrite. The quartz has a bleached and barren appearance; it is unfractured, except for several centimetres of crushed quartz along the walls. The adit was driven westward across the vein. Samples are reported to contain low gold values. This vein may lie along the continuation of the zone that hosts the Midas (093A 033) and Jane (093A 030) veins to the south.

In July, 1869, A. Johnson, B. Gallagher, and R. Davies recorded three discovery quartz claims on a north fork of Little Snowshoe Creek. These may have been on what is now known either as the Hebson vein (093A 101) or the Imperial vein.

Bibliography
EMPR ASS RPT 10269, 11194
EMPR ASS RPT SUM 1981-249
EMPR BULL *34, pp. 40,43,44,64
EMPR EXPL 1982-273
EMPR OF 2001-11
GSC MAP 59-1959; 1424A; 1538G
GSC MEM 421
GSC P 38-16, p. 34
GSC OF 574; 844

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