The Geology and Mineral Deposits of the Harricanaw And Bell River Basins

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
George W. Bain
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
51
File Size:
15192 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1927

Abstract

Summary During the last three years the discovery of gold in the belt of volcanic and sedimentary rocks extending eastward from the Porcupine and Kirkland Lake gold-fields has caused a great deal of excitement in mining circles. The area is heavily drift covered, and every aid to the location of veins is eagerly grasped. A knowledge of the physiographic history of the area is of the utmost importance in the application of many of these aids. Evidence is presented to show that glacial erosion has lowered the general elevation very little below the pre-glacial level, and that many glacial erratics have been carried less than three miles southward. Probably a knowledge of the general geology of a: region was never more necessary to the understanding of the distribution and continuation in depth of the mineral veins than in this area. Four distinct granites occur in the region, and gold-bearing veins are genetically associated with only one of these. Two types of quartz-feldspar porphyries have been found, only one of which has any bearing on the locus of the mineral veins. Many other examples of this complexity of associations might be cited, but everyone goes to show that in most cases the economic importance of the deposits can be realized only after the regional geology is understood. A series of sandstone, limestone and shale intruded by granite lies unconformably below the Keewatin lavas. The latter are intruded by a gneissoid granite and are overlain unconformably by the thick series of Timiskaming greywackes and silts. These are intruded by carbonated syenites and syenite porphyries which have since been rendered somewhat schistose.
Citation

APA: George W. Bain  (1927)  The Geology and Mineral Deposits of the Harricanaw And Bell River Basins

MLA: George W. Bain The Geology and Mineral Deposits of the Harricanaw And Bell River Basins. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1927.

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