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File Created: 24-Jul-1985 by BC Geological Survey (BCGS)
Last Edit:  25-May-2006 by Garry J. Payie (GJP)

Summary Help Help

NMI
Name HELEN (L.691), CAPITAL PRIZE (L.914), MAPLE LEAF (L.1484), MAPLE LEAF FRACTION (L.2040), SKYLARK CAMP, BARBARA Mining Division Greenwood
BCGS Map 082E007
Status Past Producer NTS Map 082E02E
Latitude 049º 04' 42'' UTM 11 (NAD 83)
Longitude 118º 40' 46'' Northing 5437522
Easting 377356
Commodities Silver, Gold, Copper, Lead, Zinc Deposit Types I05 : Polymetallic veins Ag-Pb-Zn+/-Au
Tectonic Belt Omineca Terrane Slide Mountain
Capsule Geology

The Helen occurrence is underlain by highly metamorphosed greenstones and quartzites of the Upper Paleozoic Knob Hill Group. A quartz vein, striking west and dipping 60 degrees south, varying from a fraction of a centimetre to 60 centimetres wide, occurs along a well defined fissure in the metasediments. Pyrite, galena, sphalerite and possibly tetrahedrite are associated.

The Helen vein has been traced on surface for several hundred feet by opencuts. Uphill and to the northeast, other quartz veins have been indicated by shallow shafts and cuts. Drifts on the Helen had been run 35 metres to the southeast and 43 metres to the northwest from the bottom of the west shaft. An 8 inch sample across the vein, 1.8 metres from the north drift, assayed 1.37 grams per tonne gold and 480 grams per tonne silver (Minister of Mines Annual Report 1934, page D6).

Two shafts were initially begun on the Helen in 1894. Development seems to have been continuous from 1904 to 1906. Seventy-two tonnes were reported shipped in 1905 and 15 tonnes in 1906. In 1905 alone, the Helen Mining Company, of Chicago, did 84 metres of sinking and raising, and more than 122 metres of cross-cutting and drifting and the shaft was down 64 metres. Records do not indicate commodity recovery for 1905. In 1921, a lease was taken on the property by Ola Lofstad and 2 adits were driven at lower elevations than the outcrop and a small quartz vein was developed. Lofstad shipped 18 tonnes in 1925. Records under the name of Robert Lee indicate that a further 9 tonnes were mined in 1940. Production records (not including 1905) indicate that a total of 42 tonnes were mined from which 6096 grams of silver, 186 grams of gold, 1861 kilograms of lead and 117 kilograms of lead were recovered.

Bibliography
EMPR AEROMAG MAP 8497G
EMPR AR 1894-756; 1901-1230; 1902-181; 1903-167,170; 1904-213,219;
1905-180,183; 1906-250; 1907-219; 1920-350; 1921-184,347; 1922-174;
1925-197,445; 1934-D6; 1940-24
EMPR BC METAL MM00866
EMPR BULL 1-84
EMPR INDEX 3-199
EMPR MR MAP 6 (1932)
EMPR OF 1990-25
EMPR P 1986-2
EMPR PF (GREENWOOD AREA,GALLOWAY,1927)
EMPR PRELIM MAP 59
GSC MAP 828; 45-20A; 6-1957; 10-1967; 1500A; 1736A
GSC OF 481; 637; 1969
GSC P 67-42; 79-29
EMPR PFD 1070

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