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: 24-Jul-1985 by BC Geological Survey (BCGS)
Last Edit:  24-Jun-2022 by Karl A. Flower (KAF)

Summary Help Help

NMI 092L6 Fe1
Name MERRY WIDOW 5 (L.1533,L.1543), EMPIRE, SIDEHILL FRACTION, QUATSINO COPPER, RAVEN COPPER, KINGFISHER, COPPER KNOB Mining Division Alberni, Nanaimo
BCGS Map 092L034
Status Past Producer NTS Map 092L06W
Latitude 050º 21' 19'' UTM 09 (NAD 83)
Longitude 127º 15' 13'' Northing 5579591
Easting 624230
Commodities Magnetite, Iron, Copper, Gold, Zinc, Cobalt, Limestone, Arsenic, Silver Deposit Types K03 : Fe skarn
I05 : Polymetallic veins Ag-Pb-Zn+/-Au
Tectonic Belt Insular Terrane Wrangell
Capsule Geology

The Merry Widow deposit is located on the northeast slopes of Merry Widow Mountain, approximately 800 metres south of Newt Lake.

Regionally, the area is underlain by basaltic volcanic rocks of the Upper Triassic Karmutsen Formation (Vancouver Group), which are overlain sequentially by limestone of the Upper Triassic Quatsino Formation (Vancouver Group); limestone, mudstone and siltstone of the Upper Triassic Parson Bay Formation (Bonanza Group) and mixed volcanic and sedimentary rocks of the Lower Jurassic LeMare Lake volcanic unit (Bonanza Group). The volcanic and sedimentary rocks have been intruded by gabbro to quartz diorite of the Lower to Middle Jurassic Island Plutonic Suite.

The deposit occurs as 3 stacked lenses containing massive magnetite within Lower Jurassic Bonanza Group volcaniclastics and underlying Upper Triassic Vancouver Group, Quatsino Formation limestone. The occurrence lies several hundred metres east of the diorite to gabbro Coast Copper or Benson Lake stock of the Early to Middle Jurassic Island Plutonic Suite.

The sediments and volcanics are north to northwest striking and west dipping. The intrusion has locally modified attitudes. The north striking intrusive contact dips 90 to 70 degrees eastward; but in the vicinity of the open pit it dips only 55 degrees east. Contact metamorphism of limestone is limited to recrystallization, with destruction of bedding features. The volcanic rocks (clastics, pyroclastics and flows) are hornfelsed with local lenses of garnet- epidote-actinolite-diopside-chlorite skarn. Intrusive greenstone sills, dikes and masses, and crosscutting dikes of andesite, alaskite, diabase and granodiorite are present. Northeast trending faults, dipping south, predominate.

The upper lens of the main deposit occurs as two distinct ore zones, separated laterally by about 30 metres of un-mineralized skarn. The upper lens measures 104 metres in diameter, is 17 metres thick and dips 30 degrees east. Limestone abruptly terminates the mineralization down dip.

The middle lens is separated from the upper by 12 metres of barren, skarned volcanic rock through which passes a flat-lying thrust fault. The middle lens is 85 metres wide and 9 metres thick.

The lowermost lens lies along the gabbro contact and separated from it by a thin skarn rind. It has been explored for 165 metres down dip, where the lens thins considerably from a 12-metre maximum width near its upper limit (Property File - J.C. Lund, 1966).

Magnetite mineralization in the lenses is massive, with sharp contacts when enclosed by limestone. Contacts with volcanic and intrusive rocks are less distinct, with disseminated magnetite occurring at some distance away from the massive lenses, giving a gradational change in magnetite distribution. Bedding structures can in places be traced into magnetite. Ore locally passes outward into stringers along bedding planes or follows dikes and sills in limestone. Botryoidal structures are present, suggesting emplacement at low pressure and temperature by "gel metasomatism" (Open File 1988-28, page 44).

Small amounts of arsenopyrite with pyrrhotite, sphalerite, marcasite, cuprite, chalcopyrite and calcite are reported. A north striking fault south of the open pit hosts small amounts of iron and copper sulphides and cobaltite with cobalt bloom (erythrite). Minor pyrite, chalcopyrite and pyrrhotite accompanied by quartz are present. Jefferey (Minister of Mines Annual Report 1960, page 97) believes this latter mineralization to be later than the magnetite, and that the orebody is the result of successive mineralizing periods of silicates (skarn), oxides, sulphides and carbonate emplacement. Commercial ore has developed where the intrusive contact has locally the lowest dip, and where the bulge in the intrusion has caused a change in the strike of the layered rocks. In addition, northeast striking faults are believed to localize mineralization (Minister of Mines Annual Report 1960, page 97).

The limestone in the vicinity of the magnetite bodies is white to grey in colour and calcium high calcium in composition. Three limestone samples collected by Taywin Resources Ltd. in 1990, while exploring for precious metal bearing skarn zones, analyzed as follows in per cent (Industrial Mineral File - J.M. Huber Corp., 1990):

-----------------------------------------------

CaO 53.67 54.57 52.89

MgO 1.81 0.10 2.32

SiO2 0.45 0.14 0.02

Acid Insol. - 2.22 0.60

Al203 0.06 - -

Fe2O3 0.06 - -

MnO 0.02 - -

K2O 0.01 - -

Na2O 0.01 - -

P2O5 0.01 - -

TiO2 0.11 - -

Brightness:

Green Filter - 91.8 93.8

Blue Filter - 92.2 93.6

Amber Filter - 89.0 91.1

-----------------------------------------------

An article in the George Cross Newsletter No. 80 (1989) indicates the presence of gold and silver values. Dixon (1989) reports the presence of tellurobismuthite. Gold is found in pyrrhotite-pyrite-rich veins and pockets that postdate the magnetite. A sulphide-rich sample assayed up to 17 per cent copper, 2.9 per cent zinc, 0.2 per cent arsenic, 0.16 per cent cobalt, 200 grams per tonne silver and 32 grams per tonne gold (EMPR Bulletin 101, Appendix 4A).

Production between 1957 and 1967, was from both surface and underground, and included ore from the Kingfisher (MINFILE 092L 045) and Raven (MINFILE 092L 046). From 3,371,015 tonnes of ore mined, 1,676,060,554 kilograms of iron concentrate was shipped. Annual reports detail yearly ore produced. Iron content was about 58 per cent.

In 1989, sampling of the Lower North Wall assayed up to 4.9 per cent copper, 79.3 grams per tonne silver and 41.3 grams per tonne gold over 1.2 metres (Sample 19133). Sampling of the Upper north Wall assayed up to 145.5 grams per tonne silver, 27.4 grams per tonne gold and greater then 9.99 per cent copper over 1 metre (Sample E44058; Assessment Report 19178).

In 2006, diamond drilling intersected a skarn assemblage containing magnetite and massive sulphide mineralization over a strike length of 76 metre with intersected widths of up to 50 metres and down dip extensions of 128 metres. Assayed sections included:

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Drill Hole From To Interval Gold Silver Copper

(No.) (metres) (metres) (metres) (g/t) (g/t) (per cent)

DDHMW06-01 4.78 7 2.22 6.37 6.96 0.13

DDHMW06-01 50.97 56.74 5.77 5.10 12.81 0.86

DDHMW06-02 4.67 6.42 1.75 4.28 5.02 0.35

DDHMW06-02 13.46 31.66 18.2 4.98 6.73 0.32

DDHMW06-02 37.43 46.72 8.18 5.02 8.43 0.45

DDHMW06-02 55.53 60.35 4.82 6.13 4.87 0.22

DDHMW06-03 12.21 17.50 5.29 15.49 12.47 0.63

DDHMW06-03 31.85 38.41 6.56 2.38 7.07 0.40

DDHMW06-04 5.24 6.25 1.01 95.20 21.00 1.01

DDHMW06-04 26.15 27.97 1.82 18.63 10.28 0.40

DDHMW06-04 61.98 64.04 2.06 11.53 2.06 0.71

DDHMW06-05 1.45 72.66 71.21 1.80 5.93 0.35

DDHMW06-06 1.15 34.40 33.30 1.87 4.89 0.32

DDHMW06-07 0.50 100.00 99.55 2.81 4.96 0.28

DDHMW06-08 1.53 87.48 85.95 3.83 4.94 0.26

DDHMW06-09 28.85 63.09 34.24 5.06 9.61 0.51

DDHMW06-10 26.88 64.63 37.75 3.03 4.28 0.20

DDHMW06-11 28.45 37.7 9.31 7.02 9.83 0.39

DDHMW06-12 35.50 63.80 28.30 2.25 4.71 0.26

DDHMW06-13 34.54 40.75 6.25 1.12 5.90 0.38

DDHMW06-14 35.84 40.19 4.35 7.40 5.82 0.17

DDHMW06-15 26.88 64.63 47.32 5.16 23.48 1.47

DDHMW06-16 26.88 64.63 49.31 4.56 18.73 1.14

DDHMW06-17 20.02 70.44 50.32 6.51 21.93 1.38

DDHMW06-18 19.33 69.00 49.67 3.26 15.02 1.02

DDHMW06-19 63.50 66.78 3.28 7.10 5.67 0.25

DDHMW06-20 57.12 58.81 1.69 16.05 8.80 0.27

DDHMW06-21 21.51 63.09 41.58 1.99 30.15 1.82

DDHMW06-22 23.47 63.98 40.51 2.46 8.75 0.51

DDHMW06-23 25.65 66.66 41.01 2.13 11.17 0.67

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

(Assessment Report 28863)

In 2007, diamond drilling on the Old Sport Horizon intersected massive magnetite mineralization. Assayed sections included:

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Hole ID From To Length Gold Silver Copper Iron

(No.) (m) (m) (m) (g/t) (g/t) (%) (%)

MW07-48 583.32 590.79 7.47 0.27 1.02 0.45 24.05

Including 583.32 587.53 4.21 0.40 1.44 0.62 35.98

Including 584.00 587.53 3.53 0.45 1.47 0.63 40.69

Including 584.00 584.76 0.76 0.79 3.40 1.27 >50.00

MW07-52 176.98 178.48 1.50 0.28 7.40 0.71 8.23

MW07-52 199.03 200.65 1.62 0.54 8.94 0.52 29.60

MW07-53 386.00 386.97 0.97 0.13 3.70 0.71 9.60

MW07-53 673.96 678.48 4.52 <0.05 <0.50 0.01 34.12

MW07-54 710.82 711.45 0.63 1.20 31.00 5.25 11.30

MW07-54 721.95 736.19 14.24 0.12 0.99 0.29 5.32

Including 732.70 735.70 3.00 0.43 2.35 0.64 7.96

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

(Assessment Report 30002)

In 2007, Drilling on the Copper Knob area yielded intercepts of:

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Hole ID From To Length Gold Silver Copper Iron Cobalt

(No.) (m) (m) (m) (g/t) (g/t) (%) (%) (%)

MW07-90 50.20 54.45 4.25 0.53 0.25 0.05 38.83 0.004

including 53.94 54.45 0.51 1.48 0.25 0.04 37.20 0.003

MW07-80 55.49 57.54 2.05 2.24 5.18 0.40 32.01 0.043

MW07-80 61.23 65.46 4.23 1.52 5.97 0.30 16.69 0.004

including 61.23 62.52 1.29 4.87 17.90 0.84 41.88 0.009

MW07-88 38.40 48.64 10.24 4.01 4.43 0.25 13.04 0.007

including 44.00 45.94 1.94 19.39 19.48 1.06 12.86 0.023

MW07-90 50.20 54.45 4.25 0.53 0.25 0.05 38.83 0.004

Including 53.94 54.45 0.51 1.48 0.25 0.04 37.20 0.003

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------(Assessment Report 30002)

In 2007, rock sampling of the South Pit area assayed up to 9.73 grams per tonne gold, 11.4 grams per tonne silver, 0.179 per cent cobalt, 0.235 per cent copper and 30.6 per cent iron (Sample D104347; Assessment Report 30002).

In September 2007, a measured plus indicated resource of 950,000 tonnes grading 2.0 grams per tonne gold, 5.6 grams per tonne silver, 0.34 per cent copper and 0.013 per cent cobalt with an additional 120,000 tonnes inferred grading 1.2 grams per tonne gold, 2.8 grams per tonne silver, 0.13 per cent copper and 0.008 per cent cobalt, using a 0.5 gram per tonne gold cut-off grade, was reported for the Merry Widow deposit (Giroux, G.H. (2007-09-04): Technical Report on the Copper-Gold Resource for the Merry Widow Property).

In November 2008, an updated resource for the Merry Widow deposit was reported at 960,000 tonnes measured plus indicated grading 2.03 grams per tonne gold, 5.64 grams per tonne silver, 0.34 per cent copper, 0.013 per cent cobalt and 16.1 per cent iron plus an additional inferred resource of 120,000 tonnes grading 1.19 gram per tonne gold, 2.77 grams per tonne silver, 0.13 per cent copper, 0.008 per cent cobalt and 16.2 per cent iron, using a 0.50 gram per tonne gold cut-off grade (Giroux, G.H. (2008-11-30): Technical Report on the Copper-Gold Resource for the Merry Widow Property).

In 2019, seven rock samples (Y993751 through Y993756) from the Merry Widow pit yielded from 1.1 to 24.8 grams per tonne gold, 1.1 to 78.7 grams per tonne silver, 0.12 to 5.77 per cent copper, 0.006 to 0.469 per cent cobalt and 19.95 to greater than 50 per cent iron (Assessment Report 38855). Also at this time, four rock samples (Y993765 through Y993768) containing semi-massive chalcopyrite from the Copper Knob occurrence, located near the northern edge of the Merry Widow pit yielded from 13.9 to 24.8 grams per tonne gold, 74.1 to 218.0 grams per tonne silver, 7.22 to 17.10 per cent copper, 0.039 to 0.147 per cent cobalt, 10.65 to 29.10 per cent iron and 0.102 to 0.349 per cent zinc (Assessment Report 38855).

In 2020, a channel sample of the Copper Knob occurrence yielded 9.77 grams per tonne gold, 28.4 grams per tonne silver and 2.35 per cent copper over 10.5 metres of semi-massive pyrite-chalcopyrite mineralization, while a grab sample of gossanous material, located approximately 30 metres south of the Merry Widow open-pit and referred to as the South Pit zone, yielded 6.1 grams per tonne gold, 11.5 grams per tonne silver, 0.116 per cent copper and 0.088 per cent cobalt (Assessment Report 39420).

Work History

The area was originally explored in 1897 and by 1911 a group of six claims were staked to cover the immediate area of Merry Widow Mountain. During 1916 through 1931, Cominco completed approximately 8 kilometres of underground development along the Old Sport horizon. In the 1930’s, Quatsino Copper Gold Mines explored the claims.

In 1956, Empire Development was formed to mine the Merry Widow magnetite deposit. During the period 1957 to 1962 the open pit was mined to its economic limits. In 1964, the Kingfisher Adit, which had been driven under the adjoining Kingfisher pits to mine the lower sections of those ore bodies, was extended to the Merry Widow ore zone. Extraction of magnetite ore from underground draw points continued until 1967. In 1968, Quatsino Copper Gold completed a program of airborne magnetic and radiometric geophysical surveys on the area. In 1970, Alice Lake Minerals completed an aeromagnetic survey.

In 1989, Equinox Resources completed a program of detailed rock sampling of the Merry Widow and the nearby Kingfisher occurrences. During 1989, through 1992, Taywin Resources completed programs of geological mapping, trenching, surface sampling and 42 diamond drill holes, totalling 2850 meters.

During 2005 through 2012, Grande Portage Resources completed programs of rock, silt and soil sampling, airborne electromagnetic and magnetic surveys, a ground magnetometer survey, 27 diamond drill holes, totalling 3453.5 metres, on the Merry Widow pit area, 7 diamond drill holes, totalling 3870.3 metres, on the Old Sport Horizon and 7 drill holes, totalling 751.21 metres, on the Copper Knob area. In 2016 and 2017, Bridgeland Minerals completed a radar satellite and LiDAR orthophoto geological interpretation program on the area as the Blue Gold/Merry Widow property. In 2019, Mirva Properties Ltd. completed a rock sampling program on the Merry Widow property. In 2020, Roughrider Exploration Ltd. completed a program of rock, silt and soil sampling on the area as the Empire Mine property.

Bibliography
EMPR AR 1913-282; 1916-341; 1918-475; 1919-371; 1924-225; 1928-375; 1929-379; 1930-296; *1952-228-231; 1956-117; 1957-A44,A48,68; 1958-A43,A48,57; 1959-A46,A50,132-133; *1960-A51,A56,90-100; *1961-A46,95-97; 1962-A47,A51,96-97; 1963-A47,A51,100; 1964-A53, A57,152; 1965-229; 1966-A48,A50,66; 1967-A50,A53,70-71
EMPR ASS RPT 1760, 2306, *19178, 28802, *28863, *30002, 33043, 33961, 36359, 37471, *38855, *39420
EMPR BC METAL MM00240
EMPR BULL 101, pp. 13, 57, 80, 83, 173, Appendix 4A, 6
EMPR EXPL 1989, pp. 141-145; 1992-51; 2002-29-40
EMPR FIELDWORK 1987, pp. 270,271; 1990, pp. 85-88
EMPR INDEX 4-121
EMPR MAP Preliminary Geological Map Alice Lake-Benson Lake Area, Jeffery, W.G., 1962
EMPR OF *1988-28; *1991-8; 1992-18, pp. 30-31
EMPR P *1989-3, pp. 56-58, 109; 1991-4, p. 228
EMPR PF (Claims of the Quastino Copper Gold Company Ltd.; Diamond drill sections, cross-section; Kingfisher and Merry Widow orebodies, Pit outlines, Mannix Co.; J. Lamb: Untitled reports, 1959, 1961; W.G. Jefferey & G.E.P. Eastwood: Field Report, (1961): Magnetite Occurrences in Benson Lake Area; J.C. Lund, (1966): Structural Geology of Empire Mine, M.Sc. Thesis, University of British Columbia; J.M. Huber Corp. (1990): Calcium carbonate division - laboratory data systems; private analytical report for Taywin Resources Ltd., 2 pages; Dixon, K. (1989): A Mineralogical Study of the Merry Widow Property, Vancouver Island; unpublished paper, the University of British Columbia; Taywin Resources Ltd., Diamond Drilling Report, July 1989; Taywin Resources Ltd., Geology of the Merry Widow, undated; Taywin Resources Ltd. (May 1990): Geology of the Merry Widow Property, GAC/MAC Handout; Regional Geologist's Letter (Oct. 92) and notes (Jan.1991); Photos, 1992)
EMR MIN BULL 181 (1978) B.C. 121; 223 (1989) B.C. 175
EMR MP CORPFILE (Quatsino Copper-Gold Mines, Ltd.; Empire Development Co. Ltd.)
GSC BULL 172, p. 63
GSC MAP 4-1974; 255A; 1552A
GSC OF 9; 170; 463
GSC P 69-1A; 70-1A; 72-44; 74-8
GSC SUM RPT 1918 Part B, p. 35; 1929 Part A, p. 126
ECON GEOL Vol. 59, pp. 1298-1305; Vol. 60, pp. 124-148; Vol. 79, pp. 869-882
GCNL #80,#138(July 19),#132(July 11),#189(Oct.2),#205(Oct.25), #207(Oct.27), 1989; #58(Mar.23), #95(May 15),#135(July 15), 1992
N MINER Apr.27, 1992
PR REL Taywin Resources Ltd., June 15 and July 6, 1989 (located in Property File)
Carson, D.J.T. (1968): Metallogenic study of Vancouver Island with emphasis on the relationship of plutonic rocks to Mineral deposits, Ph.D. Thesis, Carleton University, Ottawa
Dixon, K. (1989): A Mineralogical Study of the Merry Widow Property, Vancouver Island; unpublished paper, The University of British Columbia
Hudson, R. (1997): A Field Guide to Gold, Gemstone & Mineral Sites of British Columbia, Vol. 1: Vancouver Island, p. 187
Placer Dome File
Sangster, D.F. (1964): The Contact Metasomatic Magnetite Deposits of Southwestern B.C., Ph.D. Thesis, University of British Columbia
Wittur, G.E. (1961): Geology of the Magnetite Deposits of Empire Development Co. Ltd., Vancouver Island, British Columbia, unpub. B.Sc. Thesis, University of British Columbia
*Giroux, G.H. (2007-09-04): Technical Report on the Copper-Gold Resource for the Merry Widow Property
*Giroux, G.H. (2008-11-30): Technical Report on the Copper-Gold Resource for the Merry Widow Property

COPYRIGHT | DISCLAIMER | PRIVACY | ACCESSIBILITY