Geology And Isotope Geochemistry Of The Lime Creek MoS2 Orebody, Alice Arm, British Columbia ? Introduction

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
David L. Giles
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
35
File Size:
3098 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1975

Abstract

The Lime Creek* ore body in northwestern British Columbia is one of the few commercial primary stockwork-type molybdenite deposits in North America. Others include the Climax, Urad-Henderson, Questa, and Endako ore bodies. They are mined on a low grade-high tonnage basis, and are open pit operations except for Climax and Urad-Henderson. Much recent geochemical research on both porphyry copper and stockwork MoS2 deposits has been concerned with dating of micas related to the mineralization and associated igneous rocks. The results appear to show that mineralization and the predominant magmatic events of the deposit are indistinguishable in age (1-5), except where dating has been in sufficient detail to resolve the analytical overlap (6). At Lime Creek, geologic information shows that the Main granodiorite, the major intrusive and dominant host rock for MoS2 mineralization, was emplaced and had solidified sometime prior to the introduction of MoS2. The first MoS2 episode is intimately related to localized bodies of kalialaskite which clearly intrude the older stock. K-Ar dating was undertaken to clarify the age relations between Lime Creek plutonism and the apparently younger hydrothermal event that began with kalialaskite.
Citation

APA: David L. Giles  (1975)  Geology And Isotope Geochemistry Of The Lime Creek MoS2 Orebody, Alice Arm, British Columbia ? Introduction

MLA: David L. Giles Geology And Isotope Geochemistry Of The Lime Creek MoS2 Orebody, Alice Arm, British Columbia ? Introduction. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1975.

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