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Occurrence Details


Occurrence Number
105G 008
Occurrence Name
Hasselberg
Occurrence Type
Hard-rock
Status
Deposit


General Information

Primary Commodities: silver, lead, zinc
Secondary Commodities: copper, barite, gold
Aliases: Wolf
Deposit Type(s): Volcanogenic Massive Sulphide (VMS) Kuroko Cu-Pb-Zn
Location(s): 61.34 N, -131.493890 W
NTS Mapsheet(s): 105G06
Location Comments: .5 Kilometres
Hand Samples Available at YGS: Yes

Capsule

Work History

Newmont Exploration of Canada Ltd discovered this showing in 1955 and first staked it as FH cl (Y13519) in Sep/66. In 1967, the company constructed a tote road from the Robert Campbell Highway to the claims and carried out geological mapping, soil sampling and hand trenching.
Restaked as Rover cl (Y64520) in Jun/72 by F. Hasselberg and as Sip cl 1-24 (Y74695) in May/74 by Hesca Resources Ltd, which drilled two x-ray holes (61 m) later in the year, both of which failed to reach their target.
Restaked in Aug/76 as Joe cl 1-10 (YA795) by Newmont and Asamera Oil Corporation Ltd, which carried out geochemical sampling, EM and magnetometer surveying, geological mapping and hand trenching; enlarged the property in 1977; and carried out bulldozer trenching and drilled 3 holes (528 m) in 1978.
Restaked as Zap cl 1-6 (YA68699) and Zoo cl 1-38 (YA68705) in Jul/82 by Amax of Canada Ltd which transferred its interest to Canamax Resources Inc which carried out geological mapping and geochemical sampling in 1983.
The original occurrence was restaked as Wolf cl 1-18 (YB16894) by YGC Resources Ltd in Mar/90. Days later, Cominco Ltd surrounded the Wolf claims with Fox cl 1-181 (YB16912) which extended 20 km along strike to the northwest. YGC tied on Lynx cl 1-14 (YB33211) to the southeast in Jun/90. Both Cominco and YGC carried out geochemical surveying in 1990. Cominco optioned the Wolf and Lynx claims from YGC in 1991 and carried out contour and grid soil sampling and limited geological mapping. In 1992, Cominco carried out UTEM and magnetic surveying over the Wolf claims, following which the company terminated its option.
In 1995 Atna Resources optioned the Wolf claims from YGC. The company carried out a reconnaissance evaluation in 1995; soil sampling, hand trenching and drilled 3 holes (399 m) in 1996; and geological mapping and drilled 12 holes (2,956 m) in 1997. In Sep/97 the company staked 15 additional Wolf claims (non-sequentially numbered, Wolf cl 19 = YB89893) around existing claims and the following month they carried out regional airborne geophysical surveying. In 1998 Atna drilled an additional 30 holes (6,625 m) on the main Wolf claim block. At the end of 1998 Atna earned a 65% interest in the Wolf claims from YGC Resources Ltd.
Pathfinder Resources Ltd staked Pup cl 1-8 (YB90049) at the southeast end of the Wolf claim block in Sep/97.
Atna undertook engineering studies during 2000.

Capsule Geology

The area is located in the Pelly Mountains southwest of the Tintina Trench. The occurrence lies at the southeastern end of the Pelly Mountains volcanic belt, an arcuate belt of rocks measuring about 80 km long and up to 25 km wide that forms part of the Pelly-Cassiar Platform. In the 1970s several volcanic massive sulphide (VMS) deposits (Minfile Occurrence 105F 012 etc.) were discovered in the northwest end of the belt. After several years, interest in the belt waned, but interest was rekindled by the discovery of the Kudz Ze Kayah (Minfile Occurrence 105G 117) and Wolverine (Minfile Occurrence 105G 072) deposits in time-correlative strata in the Finlayson Lake area located to the east.
Rocks of the Pelly Mountain volcanic belt are considered to be Late Devonian to Early Mississippian. The belt unconformably overlies cliff-forming carbonate and limey siltstone/shale that range from probable mid-Silurian to Middle Devonian age. The volcanic belt is overlain by coarse-grained sandstone and grit, argillite and massive rusty weathering carbonate which have been interpreted as Ordovician Road River and (?) Earn Group-equivalent strata that has been thrust over the volcanic package, however this contact is not directly exposed.
In 1998 J. Hunt of the Yukon Geology Program carried out detailed geological mapping at the Wolf property. Results from this study show that the southeast end of the belt is made up of dominantly felsic volcaniclastic strata. The base of the succession consists of dominantly brown-pink lapilli tuff interbedded with argillite and lesser trachyte sills/dikes. The middle of the succession is made up primarily of heterolithic lapilli tuff with distinct argillite clasts, maroon matrix tuff with green lapilli-sized fragments and trachyte flows/sills/dikes; the upper part consists of chlorite-altered volcaniclastic rocks containing intermediate dikes and flows. The Wolf deposit is hosted within the middle portion of the volcanic succession proximal to a syenite intrusion. To the west, towards the centre of the volcanic belt the felsic volcaniclastic component decreases as the number of sills, flows and dikes becomes more numerous, and the amount of intermediate volcanic material increases.
Regionally, bedded barite and massive sulphide showings occur in Late Devonian to Early Mississippian intermediate to felsic pyroclastic rocks and minor flows which overlie thick-bedded mid-Silurian to Middle Devonian carbonate rocks. These volcanic rocks are in turn unconformably overlain by coarse-grained sandstone and grit, argillite and massive rusty weathering carbonate thought to be Ordovician in age.
The original occurrence is located 1.2 km northwest of Atna Resources Wolf deposit and consists of two massive sulphide lenses up to 1.2 m wide in a linear schistose zone striking northwest and dipping 50° southwest. A geochemical survey in 1977 outlined a 1,500 x 400 m lead anomaly with values of 100 to 3,120 ppm Pb, and an associated zinc anomaly. Trenching exposed pyrite, sphalerite and galena as disseminations and stratiform layers in bedded barite, associated with silicified and pyritized felsic tuffs. The best 1977 trench assays were 7.2% Zn, 0.02% Pb, 0.3% Cu, 1.37 g/t Ag and trace Au across 0.61 m and 4.2% Zn, 0.65% Pb and 13.1 g/t Au across 1.5 m, while the best 1978 drill intersection was 5.6% Zn, trace Pb, 27.4 g/t Ag and trace Au across 0.43 m in Hole 78-1.
Geological mapping carried out by Cominco in the Mt Vermilion area showed that the Devono-Mississippian strata appears to be continuous, with minor offsets along north-northeast cross faults. Footwall rocks consist of massive andesitic tuff and the hanging wall consists of rhyolite tuff and quartz-feldspar porphyry flows with pervasive potassium feldspar-sericite-clay-carbonate alteration. Lenses of bedded barite with wispy disseminated pyrite, sphalerite and galena occur near the top of the altered hanging wall rhyolite within strongly altered rhyolite lapilli-tuffs and porphyritic flows.
Cominco's 1992 UTEM survey over the Wolf claims traced the favorable horizon for 600 m. Cominco interpreted the anomaly as having limited strike length and no down dip potential indicating a limited tonnage potential. There was no coincident total field magnetic anomaly.
Atna Resources 3 diamond drill holes, in 1996, intersected significant, but sub-economic zinc, lead and silver values. The fourth hole (WF97-07) of the 1997 program intersected 25.2 m of 6.9% Zn, 2.8% Pb and 139 g/t Ag. Eight additional holes were drilled, all of which intersected the upper horizon of massive sulphides of varying thickness and grade. Follow-up drilling in 1998 further defined the Wolf deposit and delineated the East Slope zone.
Although conclusive evidence is lacking, it appears the stratigraphy at the Wolf deposit may be an overturned limb of a recumbent fold. The mineralogical sequence appears inverted so that stringer mineralization occurs above the massive sulphide deposit and an extensive barite-carbonate exhalite occurs below it.
Volcanogenic sulphide mineralization and exhalative barite occur at four stratigraphic levels within the Wolf property. The Wolf deposit occurs as a tabular massive sulphide horizon across a 600 m strike length and approximately 500 m in the down-dip direction of the uppermost stratigraphic unit. A higher-grade, thicker 'keel' to this horizon, which is open at depth, was defined over a 120 m width, 12 m average thickness, and 400 m down-dip extent. A thrust fault is interpreted to have terminated the mineralization towards the northwest.
The massive sulphide mineralization consists primarily of fine-grained pyrite with bands of amber-colored sphalerite and fine-grained, steely-grey galena. Also present is medium-grained botryoidal sphalerite and galena within a gangue of buff-colored Fe-Mg carbonate and more rarely barite. Generally, sulphide intersections within the upper horizon grade from banded galena/pyrite to variably textured medium-grained sphalerite-pyrite. An extensive semi-massive barite/carbonate exhalite occurs immediately below the massive sulphide. The barite/carbonate hosts disseminated to semi-massive sulphides in a banded, well-foliated fine-grained matrix which generally maintains a relatively uniform thickness of three to five metres throughout the Wolf deposit area.
Six diamond drill holes from the 1998 drill program intersected massive and semi-massive sulphides at the East Slope zone located 1,200 m east of the Wolf deposit. The zone consists of 5 narrow sulphide horizons within an approximately 80 m thick sequence. One hole, WF98-45, intersected 4.6 m true width of massive, semi-massive, mostly bedded sulphide, siliceous exhalite and mineralized lapilli tuff grading 5.7% Zn, 2.1% Pb and 42.6 g/t Ag. None of the six holes penetrated through the succession, which is greater than 80 m in true thickness.
In Jan 1/99, Atna calculated an in-house resource for the Wolf deposit (not including the East Slope zone) of 4.1 million tonnes grading 6.2% Zn, 1.8% Pb and 84 g/t Ag. The 2000 engineering studies indicate that the upper part of the Wolf deposit could be mined by open pit methods, particularly if further resources are defined up-dip.
Future exploration of the Wolf deposit will be pursued when mine development in the area proceeds.

Location Map

Last Updated: Aug 24, 2018

Work History

Year Work Type Comment
2000 Studies: Geotechnical Engineering study.
1998 Drilling: Diamond Thirty holes, 6,625 m. Drilling on Wolf deposit and East Slope zone.
1997 Airborne Geophysics: Electromagnetic Also magnetic and VLF-EM surveys.
1997 Drilling: Diamond Twelve holes, 2,956 m.
1997 Geology: Bedrock Mapping
1996 Drilling: Diamond Three holes, 399 m.
1996 Geochemistry: Soil
1996 Trenching: Hand
1995 Other: Prospecting
1992 Ground Geophysics: Magnetics Also UTEM survey.
1991 Geochemistry: Soil
1991 Geology: Bedrock Mapping
1990 Geochemistry: Soil
1983 Geochemistry: Soil
1983 Geology: Bedrock Mapping
1978 Drilling: Diamond Three holes, 528.52 m.
1977 Geochemistry: Soil
1977 Geology: Bedrock Mapping
1977 Ground Geophysics: EM Also magnetic survey.
1977 Trenching: Hand
1974 Drilling: Portable Two holes, 61 m.
1967 Development, Surface: Access Road
1967 Geochemistry: Soil
1967 Geology: Bedrock Mapping
1967 Trenching: Hand
1955 Other: Prospecting Newmont discovered showing.

Regional Geology - Terrane

Group: Ancestral North America
Affinity: W Laurentia
Name: Cassiar
Realm: Laurentia


Regional Geology - Bedrock

Supergroup:
Group/Suite: Earn
Formation:
Member:
Terrane: Cassiar
Period Max: Carboniferous
Age Max: 359 MA
Period Min: Carboniferous
Age Min: 345 MA
Rock Major: trachyte/andesite/flows/tuffs/dykes
Rock Minor: slate/limestone
Reference: Tempelman-Kluit (1977) - GSC OF 486
Geological Unit (1M): DMEC
Geological Unit (250K): DMEC3

Assessment Reports that overlap occurrence

Report Number Year Title Worktypes Holes Drilled Meters Drilled
096999 2016 2016 Geophysical and Geochemical Report on the Wolf Property Magnetic - Airborne Geophysics, VTEM - Airborne Geophysics, Drill Core - Geochemistry
093983 1998 Geological & Geochemical Report on the Starr Property Rock - Geochemistry, Silt - Geochemistry, Soil - Geochemistry, Soil - Geochemistry, Bedrock Mapping - Geology, Detailed Bedrock Mapping - Geology, Prospecting - Other
093789 1997 Report on a Combined Helicopter-Borne Electromagnetic, Magnetometer and VLF-EM Joint Aerodat Survey Wolf Deposit and Nearby Belt Yukon Territory Electromagnetic - Airborne Geophysics, Magnetic - Airborne Geophysics
093955 1997 Helicopter-borne EM, Magnetic and VLF Survey on the Wolf 1-19, 21, 23, 25, 29, 31, 33, 35, 37, 39-43 Claims Electromagnetic - Airborne Geophysics, Electromagnetic - Airborne Geophysics, Magnetic - Airborne Geophysics, Magnetic - Airborne Geophysics
093084 1992 1992 report on Geophysiocal Surveys, Wolf Property Bedrock Mapping - Geology, EM - Ground Geophysics, Magnetics - Ground Geophysics
093017 1991 1991 Assessment Report Fox-Wolf-Lynx Property Soil Geochemistry and Geological Mapping Rock - Geochemistry, Soil - Geochemistry, Soil - Geochemistry, Bedrock Mapping - Geology, Bedrock Mapping - Geology
092952 1990 Assessment Report, Soil Geochemistry, Fox Property Soil - Geochemistry
091465 1982 1982 Geological, Geochemical Assessment Report Rock - Geochemistry, Soil - Geochemistry, Bedrock Mapping - Geology
091156 1978 Drill Logs for Joe and Cyr Claims Diamond - Drilling 5 914

Related References

Number Title Page(s) Document Type
ARMC008064 Pelly project 1977 summary - Geochemical map - Figure 15b Geochemical Map
ARMC008065 Geophysical survey map - Upper Hoole River Geophysical Map
ARMC013981 Sample descriptions and geochemical assay values - R83 - Zap group Miscellaneous Company Documents
ARMC016337 Geochemical results map 105G/6 - Pelly project Geochemical Map
ARMC013979 Claim map of Zap group - 105G-7 Geoscience Map (General)
YEG1998_06 Preliminary stratigraphy and distribution of Devono-Mississippian massive sulphide-bearing volcanic rocks in the Mount Vermilion (Wolf) area, Pelly Mountains (105 G/5 and G/6), southeast Yukon Annual Report Paper
YEG1998_21 The Wolf property - 1998 update: Volcanogenic massive sulphides hosted by rift-related, alkaline, felsic volcanic rocks, Pelly Mountains, Yukon Annual Report Paper
1998-5 Preliminary Geological Map of the Mt. Vermillion Area, Southern Yukon (parts of 105G/5 and 6) Open File (Geological - Bedrock)
YEG1997_Holbek The Wolf Discovery: A Kuroko-style volcanogenic massive sulphide deposit hosted by rift-related, alkaline felsic volcanic rocks Annual Report Paper
Citations
Mortensen, J.K. and Godwin, C.I., 1982. Volcanogenic massive sulphide deposits associated with highly alkaline rift volcanics in the southeastern Yukon Territory. Economic Geology, Aug/82, Vol. 77, p. 1225-1230.

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