RI 7555 Sampling Gold Lode Deposits, Bluff, Seward Peninsula, Alaska - With Section On Petrography By Walter L. Gnagy

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
John J. Mulligan
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
44
File Size:
2509 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1971

Abstract

The Bureau of Mines sampled a gold-bearing schist series 50 miles east of Nome near Bluff, a dormant mining camp on the southern shore of the Seward Peninsula, Alaska. Gold is unevenly distributed through a section of a schist series that extends from the coast northward 4,500 feet. In this section the schists dip westward 20 to 38 degrees and have an outcrop width of about 1,000 feet and a normal width of about 500 feet. An intensely fractured zone within the schists averages 0.015 to 0.017 ounce of gold and 0.03 to 0.05 ounce of silver per ton for outcrop widths of 200 to almost 500 feet. The grade of the remainder of the schist series ranges downward to scant traces. Gold eroded from these schists collected in solution channels in metalimestones to form the Daniels Creek placers, which also extend from the beach southward under the sea for an unknown distance. The lode sources of the gold placers elsewhere in the southern Seward Peninsula may be similar schists that occupy a similar position in the metasedimentary series.
Citation

APA: John J. Mulligan  (1971)  RI 7555 Sampling Gold Lode Deposits, Bluff, Seward Peninsula, Alaska - With Section On Petrography By Walter L. Gnagy

MLA: John J. Mulligan RI 7555 Sampling Gold Lode Deposits, Bluff, Seward Peninsula, Alaska - With Section On Petrography By Walter L. Gnagy. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1971.

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