New Discoveries At The Red Dog Zn-Pb Deposit, Alaska

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
S. Jennings
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
7
File Size:
413 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1998

Abstract

The Red Dog massive sulfide deposit is located in the western Brooks Range of Alaska 100 miles north of the village of Kotzebue. It contains the largest zinc reserve in the world. Reserves were doubled in 1995 with the discovery of the Aqqaluk deposit and significantly increased in 1996, with the discovery of a deep zone of mineralization to the north. At present the global reserve and resource is 143 million tonnes of 16.1 % zinc and 4.3% lead. Red Dog is a silica + sulfide synsedimentary replacement deposit hosted in barite and black shale of the Mississippian Kuna Formation. Red Dog was thrust northward during the late Mesozoic Brookian orogeny. Understanding the setting of the deposit at the time of formation and its subsequent deformation history is critical to current exploration efforts and to future discoveries in the district.
Citation

APA: S. Jennings  (1998)  New Discoveries At The Red Dog Zn-Pb Deposit, Alaska

MLA: S. Jennings New Discoveries At The Red Dog Zn-Pb Deposit, Alaska. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1998.

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