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File Created: 24-Jul-1985 by BC Geological Survey (BCGS)
Last Edit:  15-May-2023 by Karl A. Flower (KAF)

Summary Help Help

NMI
Name GRAN, BY Mining Division Liard
BCGS Map 094K011
Status Showing NTS Map 094K04W
Latitude 058º 09' 48'' UTM 10 (NAD 83)
Longitude 125º 56' 00'' Northing 6450649
Easting 327437
Commodities Zinc Deposit Types
Tectonic Belt Omineca Terrane Ancestral North America
Capsule Geology

The Gran occurrence is located 15.5 kilometres west of the confluence of the Gataga and South Gataga rivers in the Muskwa Ranges of the Northern Rocky Mountains (Assessment Report 6689, Figure 10).

The occurrence is in a belt of Proterozoic through Mississippian basinal-facies sedimentary strata known as the Kechika Trough, part of Ancestral North America (Exploration and Mining Geology, Volume 1, page 1; Geological Survey of Canada Map 1713A). Structurally, the region is deformed into a series of northwest-trending folds and imbricate thrust faults.

The Gran claim is underlain by rocks of the Cambrian Atan Group and the overlying Cambro-Ordovician Kechika Group (Assessment Report 6689; Geological Survey of Canada Memoir 373, Map 1343A). In this area, the lower part of the Atan Group consists of medium- to coarse-grained quartz sandstone, and the upper part comprises massive grey limestone (archeocyathid-bearing, north of the claim) and limestone breccia. These lithologies change abruptly at the Kechika Group contact, replaced by interbedded silty, dolomitic slate; black, non-calcareous and locally pyritic slate; and minor argillaceous limestone. The Kechika Group rocks form the core of a tight, northeast-overturned syncline, flanked by the Atan Group. Strata generally strike about 320 degrees and dip 70 degrees southwest.

The occurrence is centred on the main showing of mineralization, in the north-centre of the claim. Dark-grey slate with numerous calcite and quartz veinlets, near the base of the Kechika Group, contains sphalerite in narrow zones on bedding planes. The sphalerite crystals are 1 to 5 millimetres across and may be altered to smithsonite. The zone is 10 to 30 centimetres wide and extends along strike for approximately 70 metres.

In 1977, a sample (7R12R) from the zone assayed 0.58 per cent zinc, whereas a rock sample (7K1R) from a similar minor zone located approximately 700 metres to the southeast assayed 11.45 per cent zinc (Assessment Report 6689).

Other minor zones of zinc mineralization are reported approximately 1 kilometre to the southwest, and a minor zone of limestone with bleached sections hosting native copper and malachite are reported approximately 800 metres to the west-southwest of the ‘main’ zone.

Work History

In 1977, Granby completed a program of geological mapping and geochemical (rock, silt and soil) sampling on the area as the Gran and X properties.

Bibliography
EMPR ASS RPT *6689
EMPR EXPL 1977-E219; 1978-E250
GSC MAP 1343A; 1713A
GSC MEM 373
EMG, 1992, *Volume 1, pp. 1-20

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