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File Created: 20-Aug-1987 by Larry Jones (LDJ)
Last Edit:  27-Mar-1992 by William H. Halleran (WHH)

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NMI
Name GREY PEAK, KECHIKA Mining Division Liard, Omineca
BCGS Map 094F074
Status Showing NTS Map 094F14E
Latitude 057º 47' 59'' UTM 10 (NAD 83)
Longitude 125º 12' 06'' Northing 6408541
Easting 369149
Commodities Phosphate, Uranium Deposit Types F07 : Upwelling-type phosphate
Tectonic Belt Foreland Terrane Ancestral North America
Capsule Geology

Thin phosphorite beds occur at 5 horizons in the upper 100 metres of a nodular limestone unit of the Cambrian to Ordovician Kechika Group. Phosphate is present as microcrystalline coatings, 1 to 10 millimetres thick, around limestone nodules, and as phosphatized fossil debris (trilobites) in beds 5 to 50 centimetres thick. Some pelletal and oolitic phosphate is also present. Phosphatic beds are easily recognized by their blue-weathering surfaces and black colour, contrasting with the pale grey of the host limestone. Phosphatic coatings, 1 millimetre or less thick, surround limestone nodules in beds 2 or more metres thick. Phosphate is also reported to be present in the lower banded limestone unit. It occurs as thin (1 to 5 centimetres) sea floor pavements with up to 25 per cent fluorapatite. A phosphorite sample with 8 per cent fluorapatite assayed 0.022 per cent uranium (Geological Survey of Canada, Paper 79-1A).

Bibliography
EMPR FIELDWORK *1988, pp. 397-410
Butrenchuk, S.B., *Phosphate in British Columbia (EMPR Paper in Press)
GSC P *79-1A, pp. 219-226, 397-399; 79-1B, p. 256
GSC OF 483; 551
EMPR PFD 884514, 884516, 802804

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