The Precipitation of Copper from Mine Waters at Britannia Mines, B.C.

- Organization:
- Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
- Pages:
- 20
- File Size:
- 5612 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1928
Abstract
The copper-bearing waters now treated successfully at Britannia for the recovery of their copper content are almost entirely derived from what is known as the Fairview mine; this was the first extensive copper producer of the Britannia ore-bodies, and consisted of a number of almost parallel veins, carrying good copper values, the ore consisting of chalcopyrite and pyrite in a quartz gangue. These veins occur in what is known as the ?Britannia shear zone' (Schofield, S. J., G.S.C. Sum. Rept., 1918, Pt. B), developed for roughly five miles in a roof-pendant in the well-known Coast Range batholith. This .pendant is made up of Palxozoic rocks known as the 'Britannia Formation' (LeRoy, O.E., Portion of Main Coast of B.C. and Adjacent Islands; G.S.C. Memoir No. 996, 1908). These consist of dark carbonaceous slates, quartzites; and tuffs or basic flows, and within them are large quartz porphyry siJls. These Britannia rocks are sheared and altered, the resultant rock being a fissile quartz-sericite or quartz-chlorite schist. The mineralization invariably occurs in this chlorite schist, which in the more productive areas has mottles or blobs of chlorite developed. A narrow, though persistent, band of grey slate forms the footwall of the productive portions of the shear zone.
Citation
APA:
(1928) The Precipitation of Copper from Mine Waters at Britannia Mines, B.C.MLA: The Precipitation of Copper from Mine Waters at Britannia Mines, B.C.. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1928.