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File Created: 24-Jul-1985 by BC Geological Survey (BCGS)
Last Edit:  01-Jun-2023 by Karl A. Flower (KAF)

Summary Help Help

NMI 094K3 Cu9
Name CHOPPER 3, MO Mining Division Liard
BCGS Map 094K014
Status Showing NTS Map 094K03E
Latitude 058º 06' 32'' UTM 10 (NAD 83)
Longitude 125º 12' 36'' Northing 6442966
Easting 369780
Commodities Copper, Lead, Silver Deposit Types I06 : Cu+/-Ag quartz veins
Tectonic Belt Foreland Terrane Ancestral North America
Capsule Geology

The Chopper 3 copper occurrence is situated at the headwaters of the Gataga River, 15 kilometres south of Churchill Peak in the mountainous Muskwa Ranges of the Northern Rocky Mountains (Assessment Report 2640).

The occurrence is in a region known as the Muskwa Anticlinorium, a major north-northwest–trending structure characterized by large, folded thrust sheets that expose rocks as old as Middle Proterozoic (Helikian), as well as Paleozoic rocks (Geological Survey of Canada Map 1343A; Geological Society of America, Geology of North America, Volume G-2, page 639). All belong to Ancestral North America (Geological Survey of Canada Map 1713A). The Middle Proterozoic rocks are pre-Windermere Supergroup, and are known as the Muskwa Assemblage, a thick package of carbonate and clastic rocks that has been divided into a number of formations (Geological Society of America, Geology of North America, Volume G-2, page 111). All rocks are gently folded, and some have slaty cleavage. Northwest- to northeast-striking, steeply dipping diabase and gabbro dikes are common in the region. The dikes are Proterozoic because they are truncated by a Lower Cambrian unconformity (Geological Survey of Canada Memoir 373).

The Chopper 3 occurrence is situated around the contact between the Aida Formation and the overlying Gataga Formation of the Muskwa Assemblage, although the mineralization is structurally, not stratigraphically, controlled. The Aida Formation comprises slaty, dolomitic mudstone and siltstone, argillaceous limestone, and dolostone (Assessment Report 2640; Geological Survey of Canada Memoir 373, Paper 67-68). The Gataga Formation consists of slaty, carbonaceous shale, mudstone, siltstone and sandstone. These rocks generally strike 330 degrees and dip moderately southwest. Numerous diabase dikes intrude this area, striking approximately 340 degrees and dipping steeply southwest. They range in thickness from a few metres to tens of metres. Centimetre-scale contact metamorphism next to the dikes is shown by epidote, actinolite, diopside and marble. Immediately southwest of the Chopper claim group are unconformably overlying siliceous sandstone and quartzite of the Lower Cambrian Atan Group.

Fault and shear fracture zones occur locally in the sedimentary rocks and less commonly along dike margins. They strike north-northwest and dip moderately to steeply west. Many of these zones contain quartz-carbonate veins, ranging in thickness from 2.5 centimetres to 2.75 metres. A few of these veins are mineralized with chalcopyrite and minor galena, pyrite and malachite. This occurrence is centred on Showing Number 4, a vein in the Chopper 3 claim, hosted by highly shear-fractured shale and argillite. Mineralization is erratic and discontinuous here.

Chip sample C-1 assayed 1.5 per cent copper, 0.1 per cent lead and 3.4 grams per tonne silver over 60 centimetres, while chip sample C-2 assayed 1.26 per cent copper over 60 centimetres (Assessment Report 2640, Geological Map).

Work History

In 1970, Windermere Exploration Ltd. completed a program of geological mapping and rock sampling on the area as the Chopper claim group. Also at this time, Fortune Channel Mines Ltd. and Beaumont Resources Ltd. completed a program of prospecting, geological mapping, trenching and rock sampling on the area immediately east of the occurrence as the P property.

In 1981 and 1982, Coppex Syndicate completed a program of geological mapping and geochemical (rock and soil) sampling on the area as the BE and MO claim groups.

In 2005, Twenty-Seven Capital Corp. completed a regionally extensive program of geochemical (rock, silt and soil) sampling and a 9002.0 line-kilometre airborne magnetic survey on the area as the Muskwa property.

Bibliography
EMPR ASS RPT *2640, 2868, 10960, 28281
EMPR EXPL 1982-348
EMPR GEM 1970-47; 1971-103
EMPR PFD 812728, 680870, 680876
GSC MAP 1343A; 1713A
GSC MEM 373
GSC P 67-68
GSA (Gabrielse, H. and Yorath, C.J. (Editors) (1991): Geology of North America, Volume G-2).

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