The Wide Dissemination of Gold in Northern Ontario

- Organization:
- Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
- Pages:
- 17
- File Size:
- 4687 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1928
Abstract
Those connected with mining, prospecting, or mining geology in northern Ontario are familiar with the fact that it is a comparatively unusual thing to have assayed a sample for which the assay report shows no gold. Values of 20 cents to 80 cents per ton, or even higher, are extremely common. Whilst contamination by fluxes, faulty manipulation, or a desire, on the part of the assayer, to sugar-coat the pill for the client, may account for 20 to 40 cent values at times, it is un1ikely that they would a1ways do so. Exonerating the assayer from being necessarily at fault, what can be the cause of such a widespread distribution of gold (and silver) in minute quantities- of a dissemination .that, in the writer's experience, and so far as he is? aware, is not met with on a simi1ar scale in other parts of the world? Explanations that suggest themselves are, that the dissemination is due: 1. To a very widespread auriferous minera1ization, post-dating (epigenetic) the formation of the rocks in which it occurs. 2. To a general syngenetic distribution of gold in the volcanic rocks of Keewatin age that form so large a part of the sections of northern Ontario that have been prospected.
Citation
APA:
(1928) The Wide Dissemination of Gold in Northern OntarioMLA: The Wide Dissemination of Gold in Northern Ontario. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1928.