Occurrence Details


Occurrence Number:
116B 204
Occurrence Name:
Classic Deposit
Occurrence Type:
Hard-rock
Status:
Deposit
Date printed:
6/25/2025 7:12:24 AM

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General Information
Capsule
Work History

General Information

Primary Commodities: gold
Aliases: Brewery Creek
Deposit Type(s): Epithermal Au-Ag: Low Sulphidation, Porphyry-related Au
Location(s): N - W
NTS Mapsheet(s): 116B01
Location Comments: Location from satellite imagery and company location map
Hand Samples Available: No
Last Reviewed:

Capsule

Cretaceous (91 Ma) Tombstone Suite monzonite and quartz monzonite intrudes Paleozoic Earn and Road River Groups lithologies as a series of semi-conformable sills along a 15km strike length defining the Brewery Creek Reserve Trend.  Younger, Tombstone Suite syenite and biotite monzonite occur locally in the south-central portion of the property.  All compositional phases of the Tombstone Suite intrusives are known to host gold mineralization.

Sill emplacement is primarily controlled by a tectonized, graphitic argillite at the contact between the Earn and Road River Groups.  This contact is also the locus of NNE-directed thrust faulting that has placed thin (<150 m thick) sequences of Silurian siltstone against Devonian siliciclastic rocks.  The age of faulting is probably related to earlier Mesozoic compression along the Dawson, Tombstone and Robert Service Thrust Faults and the closing of the Selwyn Basin.

Brewery Creek deposits exhibit characteristics of both epithermal type and intrusive-related gold systems. It is generally considered to be an alkalic intrusion-associated gold deposit, as most of the mineralization is concentrated within or proximal to the monzonites of the Cretaceous Tombstone Suite.  Gold mineralization occurs in fracture-controlled quartz stockwork in both siliciclastic and intrusive rocks along an east-northeast striking, moderately south dipping structural trend known as the Brewery Creek Reserve Trend. 

Altered intrusive rocks are typically the preferred host for gold mineralization, however gold mineralization at the Pacific deposit exhibits a strong preference for a siltstone host, and in other deposits into adjacent intrusive rocks.  Major ore-controlling structures in intrusive rocks are related to a post Tombstone age, NNW compressional event that produced ESE and NE striking conjugate shears and ENE listric normal faulting localized along graphitic argillite/intrusive sill contacts. Approximately 85% of the mined ore was hosted by the various Cretaceous-aged quartz monzonite sills with the balance contained in silicified and brecciated Earn Group sediments.

The Classic zone is located approximately 3 km south of the main Brewery Creek Reserve Trend.  Discovered originally in 1991 (Hemlo Gold Mines Inc.-Loki Gold Corporation) by soil sampling.  Controls on mineralization in the Classic zone are poorly understood with current interpretation based on the underlying pluton and faulting. A large alkalic syenite intrusion hosts gold mineralization primarily in sheeted quartz/carbonate/pyrite+\-arsenopyrite veins and as fine-grained disseminations associated with pyrite. The deposit is defined by 52 RC drill holes and 17 core drill holes, totaling 13,478 m.  The mineralization lies entirely on the southwest side of the Classic Fault.  The zone is approximately 1400 m in length, 30 m wide, and 240 m down dip.

Work History

Date Work Type Comment
6/1/2018 Drilling
6/1/2018 Lab Work/Physical Studies
6/1/2011 Drilling 24 holes, 6,226 m
6/1/2011 Airborne Geophysics
6/1/2011 Geochemistry
6/1/1998 Geochemistry
6/1/1998 Lab Work/Physical Studies
6/1/1997 Drilling 11 holes, 1634 m
6/1/1997 Trenching
6/1/1997 Development, Surface
6/1/1994 Geochemistry
6/1/1994 Geology
6/1/1994 Geochemistry
6/1/1993 Geochemistry
6/1/1993 Drilling 5 holes,
6/1/1993 Geochemistry
6/1/1992 Other
6/1/1992 Geochemistry
6/1/1992 Ground Geophysics
6/1/1992 Ground Geophysics
6/1/1991 Geology
6/1/1991 Other
6/1/1991 Geochemistry
6/1/1991 Trenching
6/1/1991 Development, Surface
6/1/1990 Geochemistry
6/1/1990 Ground Geophysics