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File Created: 16-Jul-1986 by Larry Jones (LDJ)
Last Edit:  30-Aug-1999 by Peter S. Fischl (PSF)

Summary Help Help

NMI 103B6 Cu18
Name GEORGE ISLAND, COPPER ISLANDS Mining Division Skeena
BCGS Map 103B034
Status Past Producer NTS Map 103B06E
Latitude 052º 20' 59'' UTM 09 (NAD 83)
Longitude 131º 12' 36'' Northing 5802235
Easting 349477
Commodities Copper Deposit Types K08 : Garnet skarn
Tectonic Belt Insular Terrane Wrangell
Capsule Geology

The Copper Islands showings are located off the south-eastern corner of Burnaby Island, on three small islands, Skincuttle, George, and East Copper.

These showings were discovered by Francis Poole while prospecting for Queen Charlotte Mining Company in 1862-3. There is no record of this company as a Canadian incorporation.

In 1900 the showings were rediscovered by A. Heino who staked three mineral claims, the Skincuttle Entrance, Golden Gate, and Trust, on East Copper Island. Mr. Heino worked the claims until about 1930. Development consisted of a 30-metre shaft with a 55-metre crosscut, a 12-metre shaft, and a 46-metre adit. In 1907 Abe Johnson restaked the Red Raven claim on the south side of East Copper Island. He drove a 11-metre adit and a 3-metre crosscut on the property. In 1917 the East Copper Island showings (103B 022), held as the Quinitsa claim, produced 36.2 tonnes of copper ore which was shipped to the Granby smelter.

The Skincuttle Island showings (103B 021) were held in 1902-07 by Messrs. Law, Hamilton and Raper. Development work on the three claims, Skincuttle, Poole, and Margaret, included 6.7-metre and 9.1-metre shafts, two crosscut adits, 6 open cuts, and some trenching. The showings were later staked by A. Heino.

The George Island showing was owned by W. Campbell in 1910.

In the mid 1960's the Copper Islands showings were held as follows: Skincuttle Island, part of Jib "B" group; George Island, Sandy Nos. 1 to 4; East Copper Island, Elma group - five claims. Work done at this time included a minor amount of packsack drilling on East Copper Island, and a magnetometer survey at sea off the island by Burnaby Iron Mines Limited in 1964.

The Copper Islands are underlain by grey limestone of the Upper Triassic Sadler Formation (Kunga Group) and intrusive sills of amygdaloidal andesite to basalt of the probable Upper Triassic Vancouver Group, Karmutsen Formation. The strata strikes east, dips 10 to 30 degrees north, and is cut by small steep block faults oriented north-northwest and west.

The showings are mainly in garnet-rich skarns, which replace the volcanics for several hundred metres along strike, but are rarely over 3 metres thick. Mineralization occurs as disseminated chalcopyrite and minor magnetite, pyrite, bornite, tennantite and cuprite. Chalcopyrite also occurs disseminated in adjacent unskarned limestone as veinlets transecting the bedding in and near skarns and in quartz veins associated with the block faults.

The George Island showings were worked from 1903 to 1912, producing a very minor amount of copper ore (Production records are not available).

Bibliography
EMPR AR *1903-211; 1909-71; *1910-84; 1911-76; *1912-110
EMPR BULL *54, pp. 197,198
GSC MAP 1385A
GSC P 86-20; *88-1E, pp. 221-227; 89-1H; 91-1A, pp. 383-391
MIN REV March/April 1988, pp. 19-24
EMPR PFD 671134

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