Mineral Possibilities of Areas Adjacent to the Alaska Highway (6445c822-fbfa-45c0-aaa2-cb1a728d1b71)

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
L. O. Thomas
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
25
File Size:
8701 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1944

Abstract

THE Alaska Highway, in its course through British Columbia, traverses parts of two great physiographic divisions of Canada which are also distinctive geologically-the Cordillera in the western section and the Interior Plains in the eastern. The Cordilleran region in the portion of the Province with which this paper deals can be divided into four major northwest systems, known respectively from west to east as Coastal, Plateau, Cassiar-Omineca, and Rocky Mountains. The Coastal system consists solely of the Coast range except in the extreme northwest, where a part of the St. Elias range is included. The Coast range, characterized by mountains of great ruggedness,. is made up of an igneous complex of granitic rocks intruded chiefly as a great batholith. In places, spurs of these rocks extend into the Plateau heft, a partly mountainous tract largely occupied by quartzites, quartzose mica schists and their gneissic phases, and crystalline limestone with interbands and broad areas of chlorite, _hornblende, and sericite schists and bodies of intrusive granite gneiss-an assemblage of rocks known as the Yukon group. The Cassiar-Omineca system marks the divide between the Pacific and Arctic drainages. Its eastern boundary is well defined in the south by the Rocky Mountain Trench (see p. 229). The rocks of the system are, miainly, highly altered Palaeozoic sediments, but there are also Precambrian and Mesozoic rocks, the latter largely volcanic. The core of the system is granitic and there is evidence (see p. 221) to support the belief that it is of such a length as to constitute a batholith comparable to that of the Coastal system.
Citation

APA: L. O. Thomas  (1944)  Mineral Possibilities of Areas Adjacent to the Alaska Highway (6445c822-fbfa-45c0-aaa2-cb1a728d1b71)

MLA: L. O. Thomas Mineral Possibilities of Areas Adjacent to the Alaska Highway (6445c822-fbfa-45c0-aaa2-cb1a728d1b71). Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1944.

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