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File Created: 24-Jul-1985 by BC Geological Survey (BCGS)
Last Edit:  09-Jun-2020 by Nicole Barlow (NB)

Summary Help Help

NMI 082F4 Pb1,Au9
Name DOUGLAS (L.2865), DOUGLAS HUNTER Mining Division Trail Creek
BCGS Map 082F001
Status Past Producer NTS Map 082F04W
Latitude 049º 00' 12'' UTM 11 (NAD 83)
Longitude 117º 54' 59'' Northing 5428231
Easting 432978
Commodities Silver, Lead, Zinc, Copper Deposit Types I05 : Polymetallic veins Ag-Pb-Zn+/-Au
Tectonic Belt Omineca Terrane Quesnel, Kootenay
Capsule Geology

The Douglas Crown-granted claim is located on the west side of Mount Sophia adjacent to the International Boundary and about 1.6 kilometres south of the Velvet mine from which it in accessible by road.

The earliest development of the Mine was in 1900 and 1901 when some 240 metres of tunnelling was done. No further activity was reported until the period from 1948 to 1950 when the Present owners did some development work and made a small shipment of ore.

The workings consist of 3 adits at elevations of approximately 1204, 1237 and 1274 metres. In 1949, when the property was examined by Little, the middle adit was caved and the upper adit accessible for only a short distance.

The Douglas Crown grant is underlain by coarse conglomerate of the Upper Cretaceous Sophie Mountain Formation in which lenticular beds of coarse-grained faintly stratified sandstone and argillite strike 340 degrees and dip 70 degrees northeast. The conglomerate is cut by several dykes of the Middle Eocene Coryell Intrusions comprised of pink to greenish porphyritic syenite as well as sheared lamprophyre dykes exposed in the underground workings.

A shear zone, striking 120 degrees and dipping 70 degrees northeast, exists along the contact between the conglomerate and syenite. The shear zone is approximately 3.0 metres wide and hosts individual mineralized lenses and veins of quartz ranging up to 0.3 metre in width. They occur in irregular intervals along the lower tunnel of the 230-metre long underground workings. The quartz veins are locally fractured, and the fractures filled with altered wallrock. Pyrite is the most abundant mineral with occasional concentrations of galena, sphalerite and chalcopyrite.

In 1948 and 1950, a total of 9 tonnes of quartz-rich ore was shipped and produced 591 grams silver, 592 kilograms lead, and 479 kilograms zinc.

In 2006, Major Gold Limited conducted a mineral exploration program on the Portland Project. This included prospecting, grid surveys, soil geochemistry, rock sampling, and magnetometer surveys. Results from the soil grid geochemistry survey and the magnetometer survey showed anomalous gold, silver, copper, arsenic, lead, and zinc patterns correlating to known mineralization on the property.

Bibliography
EMPR AR 1900-862; 1901-1048; 1921-347; 1933-242; 1950-119
EMPR BC METAL MM00657
EMPR BULL 74; 109
EMPR FIELDWORK 1987, pp. 19-30; 1988, pp. 33-43; 1989, pp. 11-27;
1990, pp. 9-31
EMPR OF 1988-1; 1989-11; 1990-8; 1990-9; 1991-2; 1991-16
GSC MAP 1090A; 1091A; *1504A
GSC MEM 308, pp. 120,125
GSC P 79-26; *87-2, pp. 13-20
GSC SUM RPT 1900-13A, p. 75
EMPR PFD 822973
Simmons, B. (2007-06-08): Report on the Portland Project.
Pirzada, A. (2008-03-05): Technical Report on the Portland Property.
Pirzada, A. (2008-04-23): Technical Report on the Portland Property.
Pirzada, A. (2012-01-12): Technical Report on the Rossland Property.

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