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YGS Publication Details


Reference Number
YQG1996Vol1_pg1
Title
Placer deposits of the Yukon: overview and potential for new discoveries
Reference Type
Indian & Northern Affairs Canada/Department of Indian & Northern Development: Exploration & Geological Services Division
Document Type
Annual Report Paper


General Information

Abstract: Historic placer mining areas in Yukon can be grouped into ten areas: Klondike; Sixtymile; Fortymile; Clear Creek; Moosehorn Range; Stewart River; Clear Creek; Mayo; Dawson Range; and Livingstone Creek. Each area has its own geomorphic setting and depositional history which is related to its glacial history. Several Quaternary glacial advances have been described in Yukon, and these are generally divided into three episodes, commonly known as the pre-Reid, Reid and McConnell, in order of oldest to most recent.

Placer deposit in the unglaciated Klondike, Sixtymile, Fortymile and Moosehorn drainages occur in valley-bottoms, alluvial fans, in gulch gravels and as high level terraces. Placer deposits in glaciated areas occur in variably reworked and buried valley-bottom, bench and gulch settings, in auriferous glacial till and glaciofluvial gravels, and in non-glacial gravels which were deposited on top of glacial drift.

Targets for new placer deposits in unglaciated areas include drainages such as Stewart, North Ladue and Yukon Rivers which lie outside of the pre-Reid glacial limit. Mineable placer deposits may also have formed on top of pre-Reid glacial drift and may be buried in valleys beneath Reid-age non-glacial alluvium. Prospective areas of this type are drainages which are near lode gold deposits in the Clear Creek area and in drainages near felsic volcanics in the Dawson Range. At the limits of both the Reid and McConnell glaciations, auriferous pre-glacial or interglacial gravel can often be buried by glacial and glaciofluvial deposits. Low-grade auriferous glaciofluvial gravel can also be derived form the reworking of pre-glacial gold-bearing gravel. Prospective areas for these types of placer deposits are the South McQuesten River valley and the creeks draining the Ruby Range on the east side of Kluane Lake. Within the McConnell glacial limits, placer deposits may be found in valleys oriented obliquely to the paleoflow direction of the glacial ice. Economic to sub-economic placers may also be found along meltwater channels within the McConnell ice limit. Prospective areas of this type of deposit are the drainages which lie to the north of Livingstone placer camp.

The possibilities for new placer mining areas within glaciated areas must be investigated, and new placer gold reserves will undoubtedly be found within these areas. These potential gold deposits may be explored by techniques such as surficial mapping, airphoto interpretation and bulk sampling of potential gold-bearing units.
Authors: LeBarge, W.P.
Map Scale: 1 : 0
NTS Mapsheet(s): Yukon Wide
Citation: LeBarge, W.P., 1996. Placer deposits of the Yukon: overview and potential for new discoveries. In: Yukon Quaternary Geology - Volume 1 - 1996, LeBarge, W.P. (ed), Indian & Northern Affairs Canada/Department of Indian & Northern Development: Exploration & Geological Services Division, p. 1-12.

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NTS Mapsheet(s): Yukon Wide

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YQG1996_vol1 Contained By LeBarge, W.P. (ed) Yukon Quaternary Geology - Volume 1 - 1996