The Highmont Copper-Molybdenum Deposits, Highland Valley, British Columbia

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
W. R. Bergey Carr. J. M. A. J. Reed
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
9
File Size:
5075 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1971

Abstract

"The Highmont copper-molybdenum deposits are at Gnawed Mountain in the Highland Valley porphyry copper district, 125 miles northeast of Vancouver. This district is near the center of the lower Jurassic Guichon Batholith, where a north-trending swarm of porphyry dikes is crossed by west-northwesterly structural belts in which fracturing, intrusion of porphyry and breccia, and mineralization areconcentrated.The Highmont deposits are 2 miles southeast of, and in the same southernmost structural belt as, the Lornex deposit. The main deposits occur on either side of a composite dike of granodiorite, porphyry and breccia which strikes west-northwestward in fractured quartz diorite. North of the dike, the adjacent Nos. 1 (East) and 2 (West) zones together contain 150 million tons of open-pit ore mineable in two separate pits. These two zones will support a 25,000-tpd mill with a grade in the first five years of approximately 0.46 per cent copper equivalent. South of the dike, the Nos. 3 and 4 zones are partly explored and will provide large additional reserves. In these various zones, chalcopyrite, bornite and molybdenite form disseminations and fracture-fillings accompanied by quartz, K-feldspar, tourmaline, sericite, specular hematite and other minerals. Bornite extends for varying distances north of the dike, beyond which chalcopyrite is locally accompanied by pyrite. Higher-grade mineralization tends to coincide with fracture swarms, or with shear zones and faults which largely parallel these swarms. The ore zones are reflected by geochemical soil anomalies which show some glacial dispersion. LP. surveys gave weak but significant responses, expressed as per cent frequency effect. The ore zones occur within a strong magnetic gradient, but do not show a significant magnetic response."
Citation

APA: W. R. Bergey Carr. J. M. A. J. Reed  (1971)  The Highmont Copper-Molybdenum Deposits, Highland Valley, British Columbia

MLA: W. R. Bergey Carr. J. M. A. J. Reed The Highmont Copper-Molybdenum Deposits, Highland Valley, British Columbia. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1971.

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