The occurrence is located in the Dewar Creek and White Creek area, approximately 30 kilometres northwest of Kimberley.
Sedimentary rocks of the Lower and Middle Aldridge Formation underlie the area of the occurrence. The sediments are Proterozoic in age and consist of quartzwackes, quartz arenites, and siltstones. The sediments in the area have been folded into a northwesterly striking anticline. Diorite sills and dikes of the Proterozoic Moyie Intrusions intrude the strata.
Disseminated fine-grained galena and chalcopyrite was observed in an area of diorite.
In 1957 to 1958, Consolidated Mining and Smelting Company Ltd. conducted prospecting, mapping, trail building and a magnetometer electromagnetic survey on the property containing the occurrence. This is when the occurrences on the property were discovered.
In 1971, Texas Gulf Sulfur conducted sampling and geological mapping over the main showing on the property.
In 1976, Cominco Ltd. completed a single drill test resulting in 1.1 metres grading 0.35 percent lead, and 0.30 percent zinc (Price, B. (2012-10-15): Technical Report, Vulcan Property). The report does not specify which occurrence the drilling was conducted on.
In 1982 to 1984, Cominco conducted a geochemical sampling program, an UTEM, and HLEM survey over the property containing the occurrence.
In 1985, Cominco completed mapping, contour and grid soil geochemical programs, UTEM and HLEM surveys, and a five drill hole program.
In 1991 to 1992, Ascot Resources conducted two drilling programs focusing on the extent of the Lower Aldridge Formation zone in the area.
In 2006, Eagle Plains Resources conducted an electromagnetic geophysical survey on the property containing the occurrence. An anomaly was identified that traces the contact between the Lower and Middle Aldridge units between the Hilo 5 and Hilo 10 mineral occurrences.
In 2011, Eagle Plains Resources Ltd. with Navy Resources Corp. conducted a large gravity gradiometry survey on the area including the occurrence. The survey found an anomalous zone centered on the Hilo 2 occurrence.
In 2019, SJ Geophysics completed a 2.8 line-kilometre hybrid Volterra Magnetotelluric (MT)/Volterra Induced 3D Polarization (3DIP) geophysics survey focused the southern part of the Vulcan property.
In 2020, Eagle Plains completed a program of prospecting, geochemical (rock, soil and silt) sampling and two diamond drill holes, totalling 975.2 metres, with borehole electromagnetic surveys on the area as the Vulcan property.