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: 06-Mar-2020 by Karl A. Flower (KAF)
Last Edit:  09-Jul-2020 by Karl A. Flower (KAF)

Summary Help Help

NMI
Name GIC, GIC CREEK, CHUC, ARC 1-4, BT 1-3, WILLIAMS Mining Division Liard
BCGS Map 094E082
Status Prospect NTS Map 094E13W
Latitude 057º 48' 32'' UTM 09 (NAD 83)
Longitude 127º 45' 36'' Northing 6408108
Easting 573683
Commodities Gold, Molybdenum, Copper Deposit Types H05 : Epithermal Au-Ag: low sulphidation
L04 : Porphyry Cu +/- Mo +/- Au
Tectonic Belt Intermontane Terrane Stikine, Plutonic Rocks
Capsule Geology

The GIC occurrence is located on a southeast–facing slope approximately 4 kilometres east of Park Creek, at an elevation of approximately 1600 metres.

Regionally, the area lies at the eastern edge of the Intermontane Belt near the Kutcho fault and marks the boundary with rocks of the Omineca Belt. The oldest rocks in the area are a sequence of lower greenschist–grade metamorphosed sedimentary and volcanic rocks correlated based on lithological similarities to rocks of the Asitka Group found elsewhere (Geological Survey of Canada Open File 483). Fossil evidence from later regional mapping dates at least part of the sequence as Mississippian (Geological Survey of Canada Paper 80-1B, pages 207-211). A tentative Devonian to Permian age is assigned to these 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 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. To the south of the Stikine River, Lower Jurassic Toodoggone Formation (Hazelton Group) volcanic rocks and Upper Cretaceous sedimentary rocks of the Sustut Group dominate. North and east of the Stikine River valley, two Early Jurassic plutonic bodies of the Black Lake Suite intrude these rocks. One is quartz monzonite in composition and the other is diorite. Small zones and pendants of Upper Triassic Takla (Stuhini) Group are found to the east and north of the Toodoggone Formation rocks. The west-northwest–trending Grass fault is located immediately to the south and separates Asitka Group schists to the south from Upper Triassic Takla (Stuhini) Group volcanic rocks to the north.

Locally, a gossanous zone of hornfelsed, chloritized, sericitized, silicified, pyritized and goethite-hematite–altered, and highly fractured andesite and feldspar porphyry (monzonite?) hosts disseminated chalcopyrite, pyrite, molybdenite, magnetite, and specularite with minor malachite, neotocite, and rare native copper along fractures.

In 2001, a chip sample (272529) assayed 1.41 grams per tonne gold over 1.5 metres (Assessment Report 26661).

In 2003, a sample (127006) of molybdenite-bearing rock from the GIC Creek area, located downslope to the south, is reported to have yielded 0.186 per cent molybdenum (Assessment Report 28004).

In 2005, five rock samples, taken from the copper-gold soil anomaly on the north edge of the induced polarization anomaly yielded from 1.28 to 4.74 grams per tonne gold with 0.008 to 0.105 per cent copper, whereas a 1.2-metre long chip sample (271727) yielded 2.66 grams per tonne gold and 0.105 per cent copper (Assessment Report 28004). Also at this time, a 3.73-metre long chip sample (271729) from the south flank of the induced polarization anomaly (GIC Creek zone) yielded 0.22 gram per tonne gold and 0.220 per cent copper (Assessment Report 28004).

In 2006, diamond drilling yielded intercepts of 0.634 gram per tonne gold and 0.0095 per cent molybdenum over 9.1 metres in hole WM06-1; 2.78 grams per tonne gold over 4.5 metres, 0.066 gram per tonne gold and 0.200 per cent copper over 1.4 metres and 2.31 grams per tonne gold with 0.024 per cent molybdenum over 0.5 metre in hole WM06-04 (Assessment Report 28810). These holes were located on the southern and eastern end of the gossanous and anomalous zone, respectively. The monzonite intrusive intersected in these holes was dated to 211.6 ± 2.2 million years using U-Pb isotopes (Assessment Report 35255).

In 2007, a grab sample (90024) from the gossanous zone assayed 0.29 gram per tonne gold and 0.132 per cent copper (Assessment Report 29605).

In 2014, rock samples from the gossan area yielded up to 0.572 per cent copper (Sample M109115; Assessment Report 35255).

Work History

The area has been historically explored in conjunction with the nearby Park (MINFILE 094E 028) occurrence. The earliest record of work in the area dates to 1976, when Cominco Ltd. undertook stream sediment sampling as part of a base-metals exploration program.

In 1980, Du Pont of Canada Exploration Limited staked the Park 1-3 claims and conducted a program of prospecting, rock and silt sampling and geological mapping. Several gossans were recognized, mainly associated with the intrusive contact between granodiorite and chert. The following year, Du Pont expanded their Park property, filled in gaps in their silt coverage, and took reconnaissance soil samples over the entire property. In 1982, Du Pont conducted geological mapping and a program of rock, silt and soil sampling. In 1983, Du Pont extended the magnetics/VLF survey. With this program, Du Pont’s option was vested and they formed a 50:50 joint venture on the Bill property with Cominco.

In 1987, Pacific Comox Resources Ltd. and Skylark Resources Ltd. completed a program of rock and soil sampling and a 2.1 line-kilometre ground electromagnetic (VLF) survey on the area as the Chuc 1-4 claims.

In 1995, AGC Americas Gold Corp. conducted a program soil sampling over a 900- by 1000-metre grid and minor rock sampling on the area as the Arc 1-4 claims. This survey showed the gold-copper soil geochemical anomaly to be much larger than previously known, covering an area of 500 by 900 metres and open to the east and west. This enlarged geochemical anomaly and accompanying mineralization and geophysical anomalies is referred to in this report as the ‘GIC prospect . In 1997, AGC Americas and Antares Mining and Exploration Corporation participated in a joint Geological Survey of Canada–industry airborne magnetic survey over the entire Toodoggone area, including the GIC prospect.

In 2001, Rimfire Minerals Corporation acquired the Bill property and carried out a program of prospecting, rock, silt and soil sampling; core resampling and geological mapping on the area as the BT 1-3 claims. Stikine Gold Corporation optioned the Williams property from Rimfire in 2002 and carried out limited prospecting through 2003.

In 2005, Rimfire carried out geochemical sampling and geological mapping on the GIC prospect and two outlying geochemical silt anomalies, followed by 17 kilometres of pole-dipole IP surveying on the GIC prospect. The IP survey revealed a 600- by 1800-metre chargeability/resistivity anomaly under overburden between the GIC soil geochemical anomaly and the copper-molybdenum–bearing outcrop in GIC Creek. The 1500-metre long IP zone is coincident with a copper-molybdenum-gold soil anomaly and associated porphyry mineralization.

In 2006, Arcus Development Group Inc optioned the Williams property from Rimfire and drilled five holes, totalling 881.2 metres, on the GIC prospect, cutting strong silica-sericite–altered and pyritized Takla (Stuhini) Group rocks consistent with porphyry style mineralization. In 2007, Equity Engineering Ltd was contracted by Rimfire to carry out a program of geological mapping, prospecting and rock, soil and silt sampling on the Williams property.

In 2014, Kiska Metals Corp. completed a program of prospecting, geological mapping and rock and soil sampling on the area.

Bibliography
EMPR ASS RPT 9288, 9398, 9399, 10485, 11148, 17322, *24366, 25573, *26661, 27148, *28004, *28810, *29605, *35255
EMPR EXPL 2001-1-9,89-96; 2003-9; 2005-30
EMPR FIELDWORK 1990, pp. 217-233
EMPR GEOLOGY 1977-1981, pp. 156-161
EMPR MAP 65 (1989)
EMPR OF 1990-12
GSC BULL 12; 270; 376
GSC OF 306; 483
GSC MAP 14-1973
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
Lehtinen, J. (2007-01-26): 2007 Summary Report on the Williams Property
Lehtinen, J. (2007-04-13): NI 43-101 Technical Report on the Williams Property

COPYRIGHT | DISCLAIMER | PRIVACY | ACCESSIBILITY