This occurrence is located near the eastern boundary of a complex belt of rocks up to 10 kilometres wide and 50 kilometres long between Mess and Schaft Creek. The region to the East of Mess Creek is a broad north trending belt of Cenozoic volcanics while west of Schaft Creek three different Mesozoic intrusive units form another broad north trending belt. Major north trending faults occupy the valleys of the two creeks. The complex terrain between is mainly Upper Triassic volcanics and derived sediments. The oldest rocks in the belt are Permian limestone that appear to be in fault contact with the volcanics. Upper Triassic basaltic augite porphyry occurs as large dyke-like bodies cutting the volcanic pile. Quartz monzonite and dioritic rock form small stocks and tabular bodies throughout this belt and are likely related to one of the three intrusive bodies. Rhyolite and diabase dykes of Cenozoic Age(?) are also numerous.
This showing, east of Mess Creek, is underlain primarily by a series of Upper Triassic green andesitic pyroclastics and derived sediments that are intruded by two parallel north trending dyke swarms. These pink feldspar porphyry dykes are from 1 to 10 metres thick and are of syenitic composition. They have been related to similar Tertiary-Cretaceous syenites in the Telegraph Creek area (Panteleyev, GEM 1973).
Feldspathization (pink) is the most common alteration, almost completely altering large volumes of volcanic rock adjacent to the feldspar porphyry intrusions. This alteration is usually accompanied by strong quartz veining. Carbonate alteration and strong chlorite and/or argillic alteration is also present.
Pyrite is abundant throughout the area averaging from 1 to 3 per cent but may be as high as 10 per cent. Chalcopyrite, chalcocite, bornite, molybdenite, magnetite, and hematite occur often as fracture fillings and with quartz veins in the volcanic rock and as dissemina- tions in the monzonite. The best showings occur near the contacts between the dyke swarms and the green andesitic rocks.
One 3 metre length of drill core, cutting a feldspar porphyry breccia, contained 0.27 per cent copper and 0.012 per cent molybdenum (Assessment Report 10682).