British Columbia Ministry of Energy, Mines and Natural Gas and Responsible for Housing
News | The Premier Online | Ministries & Organizations | Job Opportunities | Main Index

MINFILE Home page  ARIS Home page  MINFILE Search page  Property File Search
Help Help
File Created: 09-Mar-2020 by Karl A. Flower (KAF)
Last Edit:  20-Apr-2020 by Karl A. Flower (KAF)

Summary Help Help

NMI
Name TK (R-K-M), TK 1-88, FROG Mining Division Liard
BCGS Map 094E094
Status Showing NTS Map 094E14E
Latitude 057º 55' 37'' UTM 09 (NAD 83)
Longitude 127º 13' 16'' Northing 6421963
Easting 605355
Commodities Copper, Molybdenum, Silver, Gold Deposit Types L04 : Porphyry Cu +/- Mo +/- Au
Tectonic Belt Intermontane Terrane Quesnel, Plutonic Rocks
Capsule Geology

The TK (R-K-M) occurrences are located in a southwest-facing valley, approximately 4.2 kilometres west of the Frog River and 15 kilometres north of the confluence of the Frog River with Geese Creek.

Regionally, the area lies on the western edge of the Omineca Belt near the Kutcho fault, marking the boundary with rocks of the Intermontane Belt. The area is underlain by Early Jurassic granodioritic intrusive rocks of the Pitman Batholith with minor roof pendants of metavolcanic and metasedimentary rocks. Early regional mapping correlated these rocks with the Devonian to Permian Asitka Group based on lithological similarities (Geological Survey of Canada Open File 483). Fossil evidence from later regional mapping dates least part of the sequence as Mississippian (Geological Survey of Canada Paper 80-1B, pages 207-211). A tentative age of Devonian to Permian is given to these metamorphic rocks.

Five stratigraphic units have been recognized and are, from oldest to youngest, feldspathic chlorite schist; phyllite, sericite and calcareous sericite schist; massive rhyolite, chert and sericite schist; carbonate and an upper feldspathic chlorite schist. The rocks are complexly folded and have undergone at least two phases of deformation. They are predominantly calc-alkaline with minor alkaline members. The sequence is similar in many respects to rocks of the Kutcho Formation in the southeastern corner of the Cry Lake map area (NTS 104I).

Locally, copper-molybdenum occurrences have been identified in a granite to granodiorite pluton. The plutonic rocks are massive, poorly fractured, blocky and frequently host pegmatitic dikes, ranging up to 60 centimetres wide and composed of feldspar, quartz, biotite, muscovite and magnetite. Some pegmatites contain crystals up to 5 centimetres long. Fractures in the granite and granodiorite have been infilled with finer grained compositional equivalents. Nearby metamorphic rocks are composed of quartzite, and chlorite, sericite and biotite schists. Inclination of the metamorphic-intrusive contact decreases from vertical in the west to 30 degrees south in the east. Schistosity is parallel to the attitude of the contact. Evidence suggests that the metamorphic rocks were intruded by the granite to granodiorite pluton.

At the R zone, ‘narrow’ to ‘large’ quartz veins and/or quartz-filled fractures host chalcopyrite, magnetite and pyrrhotite with malachite-hematite staining in a pegmatite granite and felsenmeer. Talus in the area hosts copper oxides with quartz-feldspar veins, up to 2 centimetres wide, containing chalcopyrite, pyrrhotite and lesser bornite in plagioclase-rich granite.

The K and M zones, located to the north and northeast, respectively, contain quartz veins with pyrrhotite, chalcopyrite, and bornite with chrysocolla, malachite and azurite in a granite.

In 1967, a sample (30833) assayed 0.97 per cent copper and 0.005 per cent molybdenum (Property File - Cordilleran Exploration Corp. Ltd. [1968-02-01]: Report - 1967-69 Toodoggone).

In 2012, a sample (128765) from the south side of the valley (R zone area) assayed 0.6 gram per tonne gold, 26 grams per tonne silver and 1.09 per cent copper, whereas samples of talus (199747 and 129750) from the area yielded up to 0.6 gram per tonne gold, 48.9 grams per tonne silver and 0.723 per cent copper (Assessment Report 33391). Also at this time, samples (129775 and 129786) of talus taken from the north side of the valley (K zone area?) yielded up to 0.3 gram per tonne gold, 16.2 grams per tonne silver and 0.512 per cent copper, whereas a talus sample (129764) from the northeast side of the valley (M zone area?) yielded up to 0.8 gram per tonne gold, 9.6 grams per tonne silver and 0.680 per cent copper (Assessment Report 33391).

Work History

In 1967 and 1968, Quebec Cartier Mining Co. completed programs of geological mapping and silt sampling on the area as the TK 1-88 claim block.

In 2007, Charles Greig staked the area as the Pit Bullfrog property. In 2008, Bitterroot Resources Ltd. optioned the property and executed a program of stream sediment and moss mat sampling on the area.

In 2011, International Samuel Exploration Corp. optioned the Frog property and completed a program of prospecting, rock sampling and a 1029.0 line-kilometre airborne magnetic geophysical survey. The following year, a program of prospecting, talus slope sampling, detailed petrological analysis of outcrop and subcrop mineralization and fluid inclusion studies was completed.

In 2014, CJL Enterprises completed a program of geochemical and geophysical data review and rock sampling. The following year, a program of mineralographic and petrographic sampling was completed. In 2017, a total of 158.0 line-kilometres of airborne magnetic surveying was completed on the area as the Frog South and North properties. The following year, a program of 3-D magnetic modelling was performed on the previous year’s geophysical data.

Bibliography
EMPR ASS RPT *1674, 30681, 32631, *33391, 35236, 35916, 37132, 37133, 37871
EMPR FIELDWORK 1990, pp. 217-233
EMPR GEOLOGY 1977-1981, pp. 156-161
EMPR MAP 65 (1989)
EMPR OF 1990-12; 2004-4
EMPR PFD 680680, 680695, *680706, 680715
GSC BULL 12; 270; 376
GSC MAP 14-1973
GSC OF 306; 483
GSC P 71-1A, pp. 23-26; 72-1A, pp. 26-29; pp. 29-32; 74-1A, pp. 13-16; 76-1A, pp. 87-90; pp. 91-92; 77-1A, pp. 243-246; 80-1A, p. 348; *80-1B, pp. 207-211; 83-1A, pp. 221-227; 84-1A, pp. 105-108

COPYRIGHT | DISCLAIMER | PRIVACY | ACCESSIBILITY