General Information
Primary Commodities: gold, copper, zinc, lead, silver
Secondary Commodities: bismuth
Aliases: Mark
Deposit Type(s): Volcanogenic Massive Sulphide (VMS) Besshi Cu-Zn
Location(s): 64.634720 N, -136.8250 W
NTS Mapsheet(s): 116A10
Location Comments: .5 Kilometres
Hand Samples Available at YGS: Yes
Capsule
Work History
Copper mineralization was first found in this area in the 1930's by trapper Frank Rae but the earliest staking records are for the Rae cl (57973) in Apr/55 and Hoffman cl (80000) in Jun/56 by F. Hoffman and Copper cl (80026) in Jun/56 by R. McKamey. Asbestos Corp optioned the property in 1956 and explored with mapping, hand trenching and sampling.
Restaked by the Callison Syndicate as Mark cl (Y6283) in May/66 and optioned in 1967 to Ventures ML and Anglo Western Mls L, which explored with soil sampling, EM surveys and two packsack holes (21.9 m) before forming a new company, Hart River ML in Dec/67 to finance further work. Hart River drilled 31 holes (2214.4 m) and enlarged the property in 1968, then constructed a winter road and explored the main zone with 530.4 m of underground development plus 1645.9 m of underground drilling (32 holes) and 1028.1 m of surface drilling (9 holes) in 1969. A lower adit was also driven 67 m before operations terminated.
A feasibility study was conducted in 1969 by Kaiser Engineering. Subsequent exploration consisted of detailed soil sampling, an EM survey and 823.0 m of underground drilling (2 holes) in 1970, and 277.7 m (4 holes) in 1971, and the restaking of a few lapsed claims in Jun/75. In 1976, the company changed its name to North Hart Res L. Welcome North ML tied on 111 Luke cl (YA37588) in Aug/78 and H. Wall tied on Ark cl (YA62799) in Jun/81.
North Hart restaked the southwest side as GEN cl (YA76492) in Feb/82 and Core cl (YA77560) in Jul/84. In Aug/84, North Hart Res L changed its name to Calypso Developments Ltd.
In Nov/92, Inco Limited optioned the 11 remaining Mark claims from Calypso and added 40 Arm claims (YB29409). In June and Jul/93, Inco explored the Arm claims with 42.4 line-km of EM37 and magnetic surveys, a geochemical survey, geological mapping and 5 diamond drill holes totalling 1556 m.
In 1994, Inco carried out a geophysical survey and drilled 5 holes totalling 1652 m. The geophysical survey included 76.6 line km of magnetics and 38.8 line km of HLEM. Inco staked additional Arm cl 45-85 (YB43065) in Jul/94. In Jan/95 Inco Limited terminated the option and returned the Mark and Core claims to Calypso Developments Ltd. In Feb/2003 Calypso Developments changed its name to Calypso Aquisition Corporation.
Capsule Geology
The Hart River massive sulphide deposit occurs within the Lower Proterozoic Gillespie Lake Group where orange dolomite exhibits a facies change to calcareous argillite and black argillite. The sedimentary rocks are cut by numerous diabase sills and dikes. Contact metamorphism of the dolomite has formed serpentine and talc, and the argillite is hornfelsed. The Gillespie Lake Group is overlain unconformably by Middle Proterozoic Pinguicula Group basalt and argillite.
The deposit consists of two en echelon, steeply south dipping, west plunging lens-shaped bodies. In 1969, Hart River Mines Ltd. reported total proven reserves of 523,849 tonnes with an average grade of 3.65% Zn, 1.45% Cu, 0.87% Pb, 49.7 g/t Ag, and 1.41 g/t Au. The No. 1 Zone is up to 119 m in strike length, between 4.6 and 15 m wide and has a plunge length of at least 183 m. Proven reserves in the No. 1 Zone are 462,728 tonnes grading 3.6% Zn, 1.45% Cu, 0.9% Pb, 49.7 g/t Ag and 1.41 g/t Au. In the No. 2 Zone, proven reserves are 61,122 tonnes grading 3.65% Zn, 0.96% Cu, 0.7% Pb, 40.8 g/t Ag and 1.03 g/t Au. Both zones are open to depth, and probable tonnage was estimated at about 544,000 tonnes of a grade similar to that of the proven reserves. The one surface exposure of the deposit is near the crest of a north-trending ridge and consists of a narrow, bright orange gossan in which all the sulphides are oxidized.
Most of the information regarding the deposit is derived from diamond drill core, which is now lost, and from underground working on the 3880 level. A second adit at the 3680 level failed to reach the deposit.
The deposit is located in a west-plunging anticline, primarily beneath the Hart River basalts in shales assigned to Unit G1 of the Gillespie Lake Group. The two zones are oriented roughly parallel to the axial plane and cleavage of the fold, and rake down the fold axis. The No. 2 Zone is about 15-30 m above the No. 1 Zone, but is not exposed at surface. Guardia reported four sets of faults, all of which cut the deposit. West-trending high angle reverse faults are associated with the anticline and three sets of younger faults have the following orientations: northwest-trending and moderately southwest-dipping, west trending and moderately to shallowly north dipping and north-trending and moderately west dipping. Replacement of shear zones by sulphides attests to poorly understood pre or syn-mineralization faulting.
Three types of mineralization are reported: banded ore, massive, and mineralized andesite. Banded ore is described by Guardia as having preserved bedding in which sulphides have selectively replaced certain layers, and which grades from unmineralized argillite to totally replaced argillite over several feet. The banded mineralization appears to mantle the massive sulphide core of the No. 1 Zone, and make up most of the No. 2 Zone. Massive ore consists of at least 90% sulphide with quartz and dolomite gangue as cavities and irregular vein and patches. In the No. 1 Zone andesite is mineralized locally where sulphides preferentially replace shear zones and margins of fractures and fill cavities in intense breccias. Geological relationships shown in cross-section (Olsson, 1973) also suggest that massive sulphides replace both argillite and andesite.
The sulphide minerals are mainly pyrite and pyrrhotite, with lesser amounts of sphalerite, galena, chalcopyrite and traces of tetrahedrite, tennantite and the argyrodite-canfieldite sulphosalt series (Olsson). Morin described a crude metal zonation in the No. 1 Zone in which copper and gold are concentrated in the eastern portion and lead and zinc in the west.
Petrologic studies and observed megascopic textures indicate that primary textures have been largely destroyed by later deformation and annealing. Foliation and cataclastic textures are locally prominent in the deposit.
Various authors have suggested both an epigenetic and a syngenetic origin for the deposit (see Abbott, 1997). Abbott argues that the deposit is most likely epigenetic, given its position beneath the Hart River basalts, its overall orientation across general trend of bedding and the evidence for replacement cited by early workers.
Lead isotope ratios from galena indicate a Middle Proterozoic age for the Hart River deposit, roughly the same as that of the Hart River sills, and the two are almost certainly related. Replacement of andesite indicates that mineralization postdates volcanism. Abbott (1997) suggests that perhaps the thick, course-grained sill beneath the deposit was emplaced shortly after volcanism, and is related to mineralization.
The Hart River deposit, although probably epigenetic, formed close to surface and should be classified as a volcanogenic massive sulphide deposit. It may represent a feeder to a syngenetic deposit which was deposited above the volcanic rocks and has since been eroded away (Abbott, 1997).
Inco filed drill records for two of five drill holes. All holes were drilled in a fence across strike in the valley west of the deposit. The holes tested the possible continuation of the deposit to the west and east-west trending conductors outlined by the geophysical program. Hole 87024 returned weakly anomalous Cu, Pb and Zn values associated with thin pyrrhotite-rich veinlets in argillite. Hole 87026 returned weakly anomalous Zn values associated with thin pyrite-rich veinlets in very carbonaceous argillite.
Copper mineralization was first found in this area in the 1930's by trapper Frank Rae but the earliest staking records are for the Rae cl (57973) in Apr/55 and Hoffman cl (80000) in Jun/56 by F. Hoffman and Copper cl (80026) in Jun/56 by R. McKamey. Asbestos Corp optioned the property in 1956 and explored with mapping, hand trenching and sampling.
Restaked by the Callison Syndicate as Mark cl (Y6283) in May/66 and optioned in 1967 to Ventures ML and Anglo Western Mls L, which explored with soil sampling, EM surveys and two packsack holes (21.9 m) before forming a new company, Hart River ML in Dec/67 to finance further work. Hart River drilled 31 holes (2214.4 m) and enlarged the property in 1968, then constructed a winter road and explored the main zone with 530.4 m of underground development plus 1645.9 m of underground drilling (32 holes) and 1028.1 m of surface drilling (9 holes) in 1969. A lower adit was also driven 67 m before operations terminated.
A feasibility study was conducted in 1969 by Kaiser Engineering. Subsequent exploration consisted of detailed soil sampling, an EM survey and 823.0 m of underground drilling (2 holes) in 1970, and 277.7 m (4 holes) in 1971, and the restaking of a few lapsed claims in Jun/75. In 1976, the company changed its name to North Hart Res L. Welcome North ML tied on 111 Luke cl (YA37588) in Aug/78 and H. Wall tied on Ark cl (YA62799) in Jun/81.
North Hart restaked the southwest side as GEN cl (YA76492) in Feb/82 and Core cl (YA77560) in Jul/84. In Aug/84, North Hart Res L changed its name to Calypso Developments Ltd.
In Nov/92, Inco Limited optioned the 11 remaining Mark claims from Calypso and added 40 Arm claims (YB29409). In June and Jul/93, Inco explored the Arm claims with 42.4 line-km of EM37 and magnetic surveys, a geochemical survey, geological mapping and 5 diamond drill holes totalling 1556 m.
In 1994, Inco carried out a geophysical survey and drilled 5 holes totalling 1652 m. The geophysical survey included 76.6 line km of magnetics and 38.8 line km of HLEM. Inco staked additional Arm cl 45-85 (YB43065) in Jul/94. In Jan/95 Inco Limited terminated the option and returned the Mark and Core claims to Calypso Developments Ltd. In Feb/2003 Calypso Developments changed its name to Calypso Aquisition Corporation.
Capsule Geology
The Hart River massive sulphide deposit occurs within the Lower Proterozoic Gillespie Lake Group where orange dolomite exhibits a facies change to calcareous argillite and black argillite. The sedimentary rocks are cut by numerous diabase sills and dikes. Contact metamorphism of the dolomite has formed serpentine and talc, and the argillite is hornfelsed. The Gillespie Lake Group is overlain unconformably by Middle Proterozoic Pinguicula Group basalt and argillite.
The deposit consists of two en echelon, steeply south dipping, west plunging lens-shaped bodies. In 1969, Hart River Mines Ltd. reported total proven reserves of 523,849 tonnes with an average grade of 3.65% Zn, 1.45% Cu, 0.87% Pb, 49.7 g/t Ag, and 1.41 g/t Au. The No. 1 Zone is up to 119 m in strike length, between 4.6 and 15 m wide and has a plunge length of at least 183 m. Proven reserves in the No. 1 Zone are 462,728 tonnes grading 3.6% Zn, 1.45% Cu, 0.9% Pb, 49.7 g/t Ag and 1.41 g/t Au. In the No. 2 Zone, proven reserves are 61,122 tonnes grading 3.65% Zn, 0.96% Cu, 0.7% Pb, 40.8 g/t Ag and 1.03 g/t Au. Both zones are open to depth, and probable tonnage was estimated at about 544,000 tonnes of a grade similar to that of the proven reserves. The one surface exposure of the deposit is near the crest of a north-trending ridge and consists of a narrow, bright orange gossan in which all the sulphides are oxidized.
Most of the information regarding the deposit is derived from diamond drill core, which is now lost, and from underground working on the 3880 level. A second adit at the 3680 level failed to reach the deposit.
The deposit is located in a west-plunging anticline, primarily beneath the Hart River basalts in shales assigned to Unit G1 of the Gillespie Lake Group. The two zones are oriented roughly parallel to the axial plane and cleavage of the fold, and rake down the fold axis. The No. 2 Zone is about 15-30 m above the No. 1 Zone, but is not exposed at surface. Guardia reported four sets of faults, all of which cut the deposit. West-trending high angle reverse faults are associated with the anticline and three sets of younger faults have the following orientations: northwest-trending and moderately southwest-dipping, west trending and moderately to shallowly north dipping and north-trending and moderately west dipping. Replacement of shear zones by sulphides attests to poorly understood pre or syn-mineralization faulting.
Three types of mineralization are reported: banded ore, massive, and mineralized andesite. Banded ore is described by Guardia as having preserved bedding in which sulphides have selectively replaced certain layers, and which grades from unmineralized argillite to totally replaced argillite over several feet. The banded mineralization appears to mantle the massive sulphide core of the No. 1 Zone, and make up most of the No. 2 Zone. Massive ore consists of at least 90% sulphide with quartz and dolomite gangue as cavities and irregular vein and patches. In the No. 1 Zone andesite is mineralized locally where sulphides preferentially replace shear zones and margins of fractures and fill cavities in intense breccias. Geological relationships shown in cross-section (Olsson, 1973) also suggest that massive sulphides replace both argillite and andesite.
The sulphide minerals are mainly pyrite and pyrrhotite, with lesser amounts of sphalerite, galena, chalcopyrite and traces of tetrahedrite, tennantite and the argyrodite-canfieldite sulphosalt series (Olsson). Morin described a crude metal zonation in the No. 1 Zone in which copper and gold are concentrated in the eastern portion and lead and zinc in the west.
Petrologic studies and observed megascopic textures indicate that primary textures have been largely destroyed by later deformation and annealing. Foliation and cataclastic textures are locally prominent in the deposit.
Various authors have suggested both an epigenetic and a syngenetic origin for the deposit (see Abbott, 1997). Abbott argues that the deposit is most likely epigenetic, given its position beneath the Hart River basalts, its overall orientation across general trend of bedding and the evidence for replacement cited by early workers.
Lead isotope ratios from galena indicate a Middle Proterozoic age for the Hart River deposit, roughly the same as that of the Hart River sills, and the two are almost certainly related. Replacement of andesite indicates that mineralization postdates volcanism. Abbott (1997) suggests that perhaps the thick, course-grained sill beneath the deposit was emplaced shortly after volcanism, and is related to mineralization.
The Hart River deposit, although probably epigenetic, formed close to surface and should be classified as a volcanogenic massive sulphide deposit. It may represent a feeder to a syngenetic deposit which was deposited above the volcanic rocks and has since been eroded away (Abbott, 1997).
Inco filed drill records for two of five drill holes. All holes were drilled in a fence across strike in the valley west of the deposit. The holes tested the possible continuation of the deposit to the west and east-west trending conductors outlined by the geophysical program. Hole 87024 returned weakly anomalous Cu, Pb and Zn values associated with thin pyrrhotite-rich veinlets in argillite. Hole 87026 returned weakly anomalous Zn values associated with thin pyrite-rich veinlets in very carbonaceous argillite.
Location Map
Last Updated: Jul 3, 2018
Work History
Year | Work Type | Comment |
---|---|---|
1994 | Drilling: Diamond | Five holes, 1,652 m. |
1994 | Geochemistry | |
1994 | Ground Geophysics: EM | Also magnetic survey. |
1993 | Drilling: Diamond | 5 holes, 1556 m |
1993 | Geochemistry: Soil | |
1993 | Geology: Bedrock Mapping | |
1993 | Ground Geophysics: EM | Also magnetic survey. |
1971 | Drilling: Diamond | Four holes, 277.67 m. Underground drilling. |
1970 | Drilling: Diamond | Two holes, 8,22.96 m. Underground drilling. |
1970 | Geochemistry: Soil | |
1970 | Ground Geophysics: EM | |
1969 | Development, Underground: Drifting/Raising | 597.41 m |
1969 | Drilling: Diamond | Forty-one holes, 2,674.01 m |
1968 | Drilling: Diamond | Thirty-one holes, 2,214.37 m |
1967 | Drilling: Portable | Two holes, 21.95 m. Packsack drill holes. |
1967 | Geochemistry: Soil | |
1967 | Ground Geophysics: EM | |
1956 | Geochemistry | |
1956 | Geology: Bedrock Mapping | |
1956 | Trenching: Hand |
Regional Geology - Terrane
Group: Ancestral North America
Affinity: W Laurentia
Name: North America - platformal strata
Realm: Laurentia
Regional Geology - Bedrock
Supergroup:
Group/Suite: Pinguicula
Formation:
Member:
Terrane: Laurentia
Period Max: Tonian
Age Max: 1000 MA
Period Min: Tonian
Age Min: 850 MA
Rock Major: shale/siltstone/limestone/dolostone/chert
Rock Minor:
Reference: Abbott (1997) - YGS GM 1997-2
Geological Unit (1M): uPP
Geological Unit (250K): uPP2
Assessment Reports that overlap occurrence
Report Number | Year | Title | Worktypes | Holes Drilled | Meters Drilled |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
093230 | 1994 | Geophysical Report on the Hart River Project | EM - Ground Geophysics, Magnetics - Ground Geophysics, Line Cutting - Other | ||
093192 | 1993 | Geophysical Assessment Report, Hart River Project | EM - Ground Geophysics, Magnetics - Ground Geophysics, Line Cutting - Other | ||
019104 | 1966 | Geological and Engineering Evaluation Report on the Mark 1 to 25 Mineral Claims of H. A. Briden | Rock - Geochemistry, Bedrock Mapping - Geology, Property Evaluation - Other, Hand - Trenching |
Related References
Number | Title | Page(s) | Document Type |
---|---|---|---|
ARMC012679 | Report - Mark group | Report | |
ARMC012677 | Report on Mark group claims - Hart River, Yukon Territory | Report | |
ARMC012678 | Report on the Mark group of claims of Hart River Mines Ltd. | Report | |
ARMC012668 | Report on the property of Hart River Mines Ltd. - Hart River area | Report | |
ARMC012666 | Geology - Mark and Zebra areas - Drawing no. 701-43 | Geoscience Map (Geological - Bedrock) | |
ARMC012680 | Field sheet 116A-10 - Hart River showing Zebra, Linda B, Trade & Mark claims and hand drawn markings | Geoscience Map (General) | |
9 | Geology of the Upper Hart River Area, Eastern Ogilvie Mountains, Yukon Territory (116A/10, 116A/11) | Bulletin | |
1993-7(G) | Surficial Geological Map of Stewart River Valley, parts of 115O/8, 115P/5 and 115P/12 | Open File (Geological - Bedrock) | |
YEG1992-pg13 | Revised stratigraphy and new exploration targets in the Hart River region (NTS116A/10, 116A/11), southeastern Ogilvie Mountains | Annual Report Paper |
Citations |
---|
Olsson, J.W., 1973. The geology and petrology of the Mark group claims. Unpublished BASc thesis, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario. |