Colosseum Gold Mine Clark Mountain Range, San Bernardino County, California

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
D. L. McClure
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
6
File Size:
484 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1988

Abstract

Gold mineralization at the Colosseum Mine is submicroscopic and associated with pyrite. Pyrite occurs in breccia clasts, replacing dolomite, in crackle breccia veinlets with traces of quartz, and as disseminations in two small, interconnected intrusive pipe complexes of rhyolitic felsite and breccias of felsite and wall/country rock. Breccia types grade from felsite plus wall rock of Pre-cambrian gneiss to cross-cutting breccias "of felsite, gneiss, and Paleozoic sedimentary rocks that are in contact with the Precambrian gneiss terrane one-quarter mile (40Om) southwest of the Colosseum pipes. Mineable reserves are estimated to be 8 million short tons (7.3 million metric tons) at 0.074 troy ounces of gold per short ton (2.3 g/metric ton) at a cutoff of 0.03 troy ounces of gold per short ton (1.0 g/metric ton).
Citation

APA: D. L. McClure  (1988)  Colosseum Gold Mine Clark Mountain Range, San Bernardino County, California

MLA: D. L. McClure Colosseum Gold Mine Clark Mountain Range, San Bernardino County, California. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1988.

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