Geology of the gold deposits, goldfields, saskatchewan

- Organization:
- Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
- Pages:
- 3
- File Size:
- 675 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1986
Abstract
The Goldfields area on the north shore of Lake Athabasca , was active in the
thirties and early fortie . In 1934, Tom Box discovered gold mineralization in quartz
veins in pyritized 'granite' at the ite of what wa to become the Box Mine of the
Consolidated Mining and Smelting Company of Canada Ltd . In the rush of activity
that followed numerou other gold occurrences were found. the most significant
of the e being the Athona and Frontier prospects which underwent
underground development bur did not reach production.
Probable reserve identified to date in the Box and Athona deposits amount to
some 3.5 million ton grading an average 0.ITT oz gold/ton . Some 10 to 15 million
tons of lower grade, po ible reserve are also reported at the Box. From 1939
to 1942, the mine produced, from underground , 64,066 ounces of gold from ore
grading 0.0452 oz gold/ton at a cost of between $1.5 and $2.0 a ton.
The Goldfield area is underlain by upracrustal rock intruded by mafic bodies
and invaded by ·granite'. The upracru tal . thought to be of Lower Proterozoic
age are characterized by a helf-type ucce ion metamorpho ed under lowermiddle
amphibolire facie conditions into quartzites, quartz-mica chi ts. dolomitic
marbles, diop idic calc-silicates and cordierite-anthophyllite-biotite schi t . Amphibolites
of presumed igneou origin form concordant to subconcordant units
up to a few ten of metre thick in the upracrustals and occur as le regular
masses in the 'g ranite·. Compositionally they vary from gabbroic to granodioritic.
with the more mafic varieties being most common.
Granitic rocks exhibiting a variety of textural , structural and compositional
characteristics underlie most of the area. Four main units are recognized: foliated
(older) 'granite', 'leucogranite', feldspar augen 'granite· and pyritic mine 'granite',
however, in geological mapping the e are somewhat arbitrarily differentiated due
to transitional relationships and admixture of types. Although there is no unambiguous
age data available for the e 'granite ' adjacent northshore 'granite' of
geologically similar age yield Rb-Sr isochron dates around 2000 Ma.
The area is characterized by two major deformation events of which the earliest
gave rise to the dominant regional foliation and to rare minor and outcrop scale
folds. This foliation which in general parallels compositional layering is folded
into the major Goldfields syncline, whose axis plunges weakly to moderately outh.
Related open minor folds have subvertical axial surfaces which are locally paralleled
by a weakly defined schistosity. Most rock display a pronounced rodding fabric,
coaxial with second fold axes and apparently the product of this deformation event.
However, a note of caution is introduced into this interpretation, as the rodding
fabric is also parallel to first fold axe .
Citation
APA:
(1986) Geology of the gold deposits, goldfields, saskatchewanMLA: Geology of the gold deposits, goldfields, saskatchewan. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1986.