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File Created: 12-Aug-1986 by Gary R. Foye (GRF)
Last Edit:  24-Feb-1989 by David G. Bailey (DGB)

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NMI
Name PERKINS CREEK, PERKINS GULCH, ESTMAN HYDRAULIC, FELKER AND SPARKES HYDRAULIC Mining Division Cariboo
BCGS Map 093H002
Status Past Producer NTS Map 093H04E
Latitude 053º 02' 15'' UTM 10 (NAD 83)
Longitude 121º 41' 36'' Northing 5877240
Easting 587613
Commodities Gold Deposit Types C01 : Surficial placers
Tectonic Belt Omineca Terrane Barkerville
Capsule Geology

Placer gold deposits of the Quesnel Highland region, including the former rich producers of the Barkerville camp, have accounted for a large proportion of British Columbia's alluvial gold production. With the exception of a few producers in the Wingdam area, which are underlain by Upper Triassic sediments correlative with the Nicola Group, almost all the deposits are underlain by the Upper Proterozoic to Lower Paleozoic Snowshoe Group. These predominantly metasediment- ary rocks have been metamorphosed to greenschist facies.

Placer gold deposits in the region are generally found in relatively young Pleistocene gravels. The morphology and mineral associations of the gold suggests that it was derived locally, the most obvious sources are the numerous auriferous veins in the Downey succession of the Snowshoe Group.

Placer gold mining on Perkins Creek has been done primarily by hydraulicking. At the main workings there were two strata of gold bearing gravels in what was probably an old channel. One layer represented a pre-glacial deposit on bedrock and was about 30 metres wide and 1.2 to 1.8 metres thick. The other layer was a post-glacial deposit on top of 6 metres of clay and about 30 metres wide and 1.8 to 3.0 metres thick.

"Data from the Cariboo mining district indicate that supergene leaching of gold dispersed within massive sulphides by Tertiary deep weathering followed by Cenozoic erosion is the most likely explanation for the occurrence of coarse gold nuggets in Quaternary sediments" (Exploration in British Columbia 1989, page 147).

Bibliography
EM EXPL 2000-9-23
EMPR AR 1877-1881,1883,1885,1888-1890,1892-1895-tables; 1910-44; 1911-50; 1915-56; 1916-39; 1918-130,145; 1919-106; 1922-119; 1923-122; 1927-167; 1949-242; 1950-200; 1951-204; 1952-238
EMPR ASS RPT 16512
EMPR BULL 26, p. 58; 28, pp. 22,29,31
EMPR EXPL 1989, pp. 147-169
EMPR FIELDWORK 1990, pp. 331-356; 1992, pp. 463-473
EMPR PF (Sketch Maps of claims on Upper Lightning Creek, dates unknown)
GSC MAP 1424A
GSC MEM *149, p. 173
GSC SUM RPT 1918B, p. 49
EMPR PFD 14975, 14976, 673690, 681607

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