Porphyry Copper-Molybdenum Deposits Of The Pacific Northwest ? Introduction

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Cyrus W. Field
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
34
File Size:
1307 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1973

Abstract

The Pacific Northwest as defined in this review comprises an exceedingly large and geologically complex terrain that occupies the 'Western Cordillera mobile tectonic belt. This metallogenic province is approximately 2100 miles long and 350 to 500 miles wide. It extends north-northwest from northern California and Nevada, through western Idaho and Montana, Oregon, Washington, British Columbia, and southwestern Yukon Territory, to southern Alaska, and west from the western flank of the Northern Rocky Mountains to the continental margin (Fig. 1). Many detailed and thorough exploration programs that have been conducted by mining and petroleum companies for over a decade have demonstrated that porphyry-type deposits are both numerous and wide-spread throughout this province. Although the Granby Mining Company extracted about 34 million tons of copper sulfide ore from Copper Mountain during the period 1900-1957, intentional large-scale production of porphyry-type ores was first initiated in 1962. It began at Bethlehem Copper Corporation's East Jersey orebody in the Highland Valley District of south-central British Columbia, approximately eight years after Mr. H. H. Huestis rediscovered that broad zone of copper-molybdenum metallization and recognized its potential significance.
Citation

APA: Cyrus W. Field  (1973)  Porphyry Copper-Molybdenum Deposits Of The Pacific Northwest ? Introduction

MLA: Cyrus W. Field Porphyry Copper-Molybdenum Deposits Of The Pacific Northwest ? Introduction. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1973.

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