Central Patricia Mine

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
R. E. Barrett A. W. Johnston
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
5
File Size:
1540 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1954

Abstract

"The Central Patricia mine is in the greenstone belt north of lake Sc. Joseph in northwestern Ontario. It is 90 miles north of Allanwater on the Canadian National railway and 220 miles east of the Manitoba boundary. The unusual feature of the ore of this mine is that the gold does not occur in quartz but in sulphide minerals filling fractures in iron formation.AREAL GEOLOGYThe rocks of the area in which the mine occurs belong to the Early Precambrian. They consist · of andesite lavas and tuff interbedded with greywacke-like sediments and iron formation . A siliceous phase of the sediments lying north and south of the greywacke enclosing the ore-bearing iron formation in places resembles a sheared and sericitized quartz porphyry. This is shown in the legend of Fig. 1 as quartz porphyry and quartzite, but it is possible that the quartz porphyry-like phase is sediment. A northwest- striking dyke of diabase crosses the property 3,000 feet east of the shaft ( Fig. 1).IRON FORMATIONAlthough there are numerous bands of iron formation in the v1cm1ty of the mine, ore has been found to date in only one main and two lesser zones. The iron formation bands range in width from a few inches to 60 feet, and are interrupted along their strike by gaps that are parallel and rake to the east at about 65°. The iron formation is definitely banded and laminated."
Citation

APA: R. E. Barrett A. W. Johnston  (1954)  Central Patricia Mine

MLA: R. E. Barrett A. W. Johnston Central Patricia Mine. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1954.

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