RI 6587 Tin-Lode Investigations, Potato Mountain Area, Seward Peninsula, Alaska

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 91
- File Size:
- 17676 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1965
Abstract
The Bureau of Mines investigated lode tin deposits on Potato Mountain, Seward Peninsula, Alaska. Tin was found to occur as cassiterite associated with quartz, tourmaline, pyrite, arsenopyrite, and earthy clays, but the deposits lack the varied accessory minerals commonly found in tin districts. The tin-bearing deposits are in metasediments along minor breaks and bedding planes but not in the crushed earthy filling of major faults. Cassiterite and sulfides occur with quartz in veins, both with and without earthy clays, and disseminated through tourmalinized wall rocks. The deposits are characterized by irregular segregations containing 1 to 10 percent tin within zones averaging not over 0.25 percent tin. The largest segregation exposed is on the summit of a low hill on the east-central slopes of Little Potato Mountain; most of the outcroppings are in an area trending east to west, roughly 10 to 30 feet wide and 300 feet long. Sample values ranged as high as 12 percent tin, but the average grade may be about 1 percent tin. The extreme irregularity of both grade and composition precludes a more exact determination. Similar concentrations are scattered for over 1,000 feet to the west and north, but these are smaller and lower in grade. Elsewhere on Potato Mountain, generally similar deposits occur as clusters of veinlets at widely separated points in the metasedimentary walls of major faults.
Citation
APA:
(1965) RI 6587 Tin-Lode Investigations, Potato Mountain Area, Seward Peninsula, AlaskaMLA: RI 6587 Tin-Lode Investigations, Potato Mountain Area, Seward Peninsula, Alaska. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1965.