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File Created: 24-Jul-1985 by BC Geological Survey (BCGS)
Last Edit:  29-Jan-2020 by George Owsiacki (GO)

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NMI 104P12,13 Cu1
Name SHAWN, CAPTAIN LAKE BARITE, SHAWN BARITE Mining Division Liard
BCGS Map 104P072
Status Prospect NTS Map 104P12W
Latitude 059º 44' 41'' UTM 09 (NAD 83)
Longitude 129º 46' 06'' Northing 6623232
Easting 456815
Commodities Barite, Copper Deposit Types E17 : Sediment-hosted barite
Tectonic Belt Omineca Terrane Cassiar
Capsule Geology

The Shawn occurrence is located just west of Captain Lake, about 146 kilometres north of the community of Dease Lake and 28 kilometres south of the British Columbia-Yukon border.

At the Shawn (Captain Lake) showing, Middle-Upper Devonian McDame Group platformal carbonates host coarse grained, white, stratiform barite interbedded with dolomitic siltstones 100 metres above the McDame-Lower Devonian Tapioca sandstone contact. Barite also occurs as crosscutting veins and breccia clasts or replacement zones up to 1 metre across in both the McDame Group and Tapioca sandstone. Graded sedimentary breccias, with barite, McDame and Tapioca clasts, occur stratigraphically above the bedded barite. This style of mineralization suggests a continuum between crosscutting veins and exhalative barite. The overlying sedimentary deposits may have resulted from coeval mineralization and fault movement locally exposing Tapioca sandstone (Fieldwork 1987).

This property was originally recognized as a copper prospect (Geological Survey of Canada Map 1110A). Minor amounts of chalcopyrite occur in small hematitic zones with malachite. In 1981, Dekalb Mining Corporation staked the Shawn claim and completed a trenching, mapping and sampling program. One old trench was extended and three new trenches were cut into the side of the hill crosscutting the barite zones. A total of 30 chip samples were taken over all the zones where barite occurred in the trenches. The trenching program exposed numerous bands of barite-bearing rock; the main barite zone is over 35 metres wide and consists of six barite-rich bands that individually are up to 5 metres wide. This zone was traced on the surface for up to 120 metres in length. Barite boulders were found up to one kilometre northeast of the trenches. One high grade grab sample of barite assayed 95.7 per cent BaSO4 with a specific gravity of 4.41 (Assessment Report 10334).

Bibliography
EMPR ASS RPT 8627, *10334
EMPR EXPL 1981-239
EMPR FIELDWORK *1987, pp. 233-243
EMPR MP MAP 1992-11
EMPR OF 1988-10; 1996-11; 2000-22
EMPR BULL 83
GSC MAP *1110A
GSC MEM 319
GSC OF 2779

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