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File Created: 24-Jul-1985 by BC Geological Survey (BCGS)
Last Edit:  28-Dec-1988 by Dorthe E. Jakobsen (DEJ)

Summary Help Help

NMI
Name TITAN, UPPER CHUM Mining Division Alaska, USA
BCGS Map 104B010
Status Developed Prospect NTS Map 104B01E
Latitude 056º 00' 40'' UTM 09 (NAD 83)
Longitude 130º 01' 25'' Northing 6207789
Easting 436179
Commodities Gold, Silver, Zinc, Lead, Copper Deposit Types I05 : Polymetallic veins Ag-Pb-Zn+/-Au
Tectonic Belt Intermontane Terrane Stikine
Capsule Geology

The Titan workings are located on the "Upper Chum" claims, previously the Titan claims on the west slope of Mt. Welker, east of Fish Creek in southeastern Alaska. The claims were staked in 1917 and were being worked in 1925. Exxon Minerals explored the property in 1983.

Located in the Intermontane Belt, the area, bounded on the west by the Coast Crystalline Complex and on the east by the Bowser Basin, is part of the Stikinia Terrane.

Mineralization is hosted by the Upper Triassic to Lower Jurassic Hazelton Group Unuk River Formation metavolcanics. The Hazelton Group is a northwest trending steeply east dipping belt of folded andesitic lapilli tuffs, flows and breccia containing a thick se- quence of argillite and siltstone infolded along a synclinal axis. The sequence is intruded by the Early Jurassic Texas Creek plutonic suite of dacitic porphyry dykes and sills, Eocene granitic Hyder intrusives and lamprophyre dykes.

Open cuts expose a quartz vein in a northwest trending sheared and altered porphyry dyke. The dyke has been sericitized and sili- cified. The vein strikes 120 to 130 degrees, dips 45 degrees south and has been traced intermittently in outcrop for 230 metres with a vertical extent of 84 metres. At the southeast end of the open cut, 55 metres above this vein, a band of porphyry up to 1.5 metres wide contains pyrite and quartz stringers. These stringers, up to 10 centimetres wide, contain disseminated sphalerite, galena, pyrite and chalcopyrite. Sphalerite is the most abundant with total sulphide content up to 25 per cent.

Hand picked samples from mineralized surface exposures are re- ported to contain high gold and silver values, while underground assays were low. The showings in the Titan adit were resampled in 1983 by Exxon Minerals (results unavailable). A possible extension of the vein occurs 600 metres east of the camp at 1220 metres elevation with minor similar mineralization.

Bibliography
EMPR AR 1923-A87
EMPR BULL 58; 63
EMPR FIELDWORK 1983, pp. 149-165; 1984, pp. 316-342; 1985, pp. 217-219
EMPR OF 1987-22
EMPR PF (Dani Alldrick Files, *Titan Adit area, p. 235,247, Exxon Minerals Corp.)
EMPR REGIONAL PF (Mineral Terranes of Alaska, 1982, Plate F; Sutherland-Brown, A., (1951): Cordilleran Structure in Canada and Alaska)
GSC MEM 175
GSC P 89-1E, pp. 145-154
CIM SPEC VOL #8, pp. 149-170, 215-229
CJES VOL 10, Part 1, 1973, pp. 408-420
USGS BULL 722; 800; *807-72,74; 1024-140; 1425
Brown, D.A., (1987): Geological Setting of the Volcanic-Hosted Silbak Premier Mine, Northwestern British Columbia, M.Sc. Thesis, University of British Columbia (in Property File: 104B 054)

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