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File Created: 24-Jul-1985 by BC Geological Survey (BCGS)
Last Edit:  12-Jun-2001 by George Owsiacki (GO)

Summary Help Help

NMI
Name CRISS CREEK Mining Division Kamloops
BCGS Map 092I096
Status Past Producer NTS Map 092I15W
Latitude 050º 54' 25'' UTM 10 (NAD 83)
Longitude 120º 55' 56'' Northing 5641513
Easting 645379
Commodities Gold Deposit Types C01 : Surficial placers
C02 : Buried-channel placers
Tectonic Belt Intermontane Terrane Quesnel
Capsule Geology

In either the late 1920s or early 1930s, several shafts were sunk at the junction of Criss Creek and Deadman River by the Branch Ranch Mining Company; one of these is stated to have reached a depth of 10.6 metres. Thompson River Mining Company sunk shafts in the same area to depths of 10.6 to 12.2 metres without reaching bedrock. Gold is stated to have been obtained by Chinese miners a short distance up Criss Creek. All of this work was instigated by the theory that the original channel of the Thompson River crossed the country about 8 kilometres up Criss Creek, and that the placer gold, if any, would be concentrated somewhere in the lower reaches of the creek (Minister of Mines Annual Report 1933).

In the part of the creek from 3.2 to slightly more than 4.8 kilometres above its mouth, four men worked the gravels in 1940. Bedrock lies at a depth of from 2 to 3 metres. The overburden probably deepens above the workings, as no outcrops were found along the sides of the creek for a considerable distance. The stretch of creek that had been worked is narrow and steep walled, and the gravels contained many boulders. One man, Fred Morris, stated that he had worked there at intervals for 6 years. He reports his maximum winnings to have been $7 for a single day and as much as $65 a month obtained by steady work (ca. 1940; Geological Survey of Canada Memoir 249).

About 2 kilometres further upstream from the work done in 1940, an old cabin existed at 737 metres elevation. Work done near the cabin some twenty odd years previous to 1934 consisted of a shaft sunk to 10 metres to bedrock and a drift extended to an unknown distance. A little upstream a dam was constructed and sluicing operations carried out by hand methods. In the early 1930s, several shafts were sunk south of the cabin. South of the dam an adit was driven into the bank (Report on Criss Creek Placers, 1934).

Total recorded production from Criss Creek is 1586 grams of gold.

Bibliography
EMPR BULL 28, p. 38
EMPR PF (*author unknown (1934): Report on Criss Creek Placers)
EMPR AR *1933-A183
GSC MEM *249, p. 45
GSC MAP 886A; 42-1989
GSC OF 980
GSC P 82-1A, pp. 293-297; 85-1A, pp. 349-358
EMPR PFD 840870, 840871

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