Timmins & Beardmore - Northern Ontario
Focused on becoming a near-term Gold Producer
  • Demo Video
  • Private Messages
  • Edit My Profile
  • View/Edit Portfolio

AGORACOM News Flash

AGORACOM WIRE - WEDNESDAY MAY 30TH, 2012

GOLDEN HOPE MINES (TSXV:GNH) Confirms High Grade Intersection of 64.1 g/t Au (Gold) over 1m Read More 

  • The screen metallic analysis returned 82 g/t Au for an average grade of 93.5 g/t Au.
  • Two additional fire assays on the original pulp done prior to the screen metallic analyses returned 0.22 g/t Au and 0.12 g/t Au for an average fire assay grade of 0.41 g/t Au. The weighted average of all the fire assays and screen metallic assays from this 1-metre section in hole BD2011-184 is 64.1 g/t Au.

Sonomax® eers™ Custom Earbuds Announces Sponsorship of MUTEK 2012

CONTINENTAL ENERGY  Geothermal Energy Project Receives US$ 11.5 Million Grant Read More * Client

AGORACOM Launches Graphite Stocks Blog

Top Stories

  • FOCUS METALS (TSXV:FMS) Changes Its Name to Focus Graphite Inc. Read More   |   *SPONSOR

  • LOMIKO METALS (TSXV:LMK) Paul Gill Discusses Exploration Initiative with James West of Midas Letter Read More   |   *SPONSOR
  • GRAPHITE DEMAND Seen Surging from Fuel Cells, Nuclear Reactors, Graphene Read More

 

 

Message: Old Northern Miner arcticle

Ks16920
Rank: [?]
President
Points: [?]
4893
Rating: [?]
Votes: 126 Score: 3.9
  • Currently 3.9/5 Stars.
Did you know? You can earn activity points by filling your profile with information about yourself (what city you live in, your favorite team, blogs etc.

Old Northern Miner arcticle

posted on Sep 24, 09 08:02AM

Good morning,

I can't remember if I posted this article before, I think it's good info though.

Note what gold values the author thinks are generally minable in 1997..... 6 - 10 g/t (within 2 to 10 mil tons of ore).

The veins with larger alteration halos are key to getting enough ore. So although the veins are the primary conductor for gold, it may be that these hydrothermal zones carry equal importance in that they will contribute in a big way to the total ore tonnage.

I think it's these type of zones at Brookbank that rack up the tons.

.......................................

The Northern Miner August 4, 1997

By Derek Wilton

In temporal terms, quartz-Carbonate vein gold deposits apparently have been restricted to specific intervals in the Earth's history, including the Late Archean, Early Proterozoic, early Palaeozoic and Early Mesozoic periods. They are best developed in Archean greenstone belts within Achaean cratonic areas, such as in northern regions of Ontario and Quebec, Western Australia and southern Africa. In Canada, the best-known Achaean-related mines include the Giant in the Northwest Territories and, in Ontario, the Campbell, Red Lake, Dome, Hollinger and McIntyre, as well as the Kirkland Lake camp. Examples of Proterozoic-related gold- producing regions include Saskatchewan's Star Lake and La Ronge districts. Examples of Palaeozoic-Aged formations include the Meguma deposits of Nova Scotia and the Baie Vert occurrences of Newfoundland. Mesozoic-related operations include those in the Bralorne and Caribou districts of British Columbia.

These quartz-Carbonate vein deposits are Canada's primary gold producers and are one of the most important producers worldwide. In general, a minable deposit of this type contains a grade of 6 to 10 grams gold per tonne within 2 to 10 million tonnes of ore. The drilling and assaying of this sort of deposit can be complicated and fraught with difficulty. The veins themselves usually can be readily mapped through drilling, but determination of the true gold content can be difficult as a result of the so-Called "nugget effect," in which all the gold within an interval can be concentrated in a single point. The assaying of vein material that is small in quantity but which contains a nugget can yield an erroneously large grade for the system, whereas if a gold-rich nugget within the vein is missed, erroneously low grades can result. To test a deposit properly, sampling must be thorough and completed on a statistically rigorous basis. Since these veins have rather limited aerial extents, the most economically favourable are those with a larger alteration halo. Those halos can also be auriferous, with economically exploitable gold concentrations. Exploration for quartz-Carbonate vein deposits can generally be restricted to orogenic (mountain) or greenstone belts, and the large-scale planar fault-fracture structures therein. Mapping of fault systems and alteration is essential. Because of its low concentrations in the natural environment, gold is often difficult to detect; hence routine procedures for geochemical exploration (lake sediment surveys, for example) are often too equivocal for tracing the metal in the geological environment. Some elements, particularly antimony and arsenic, are so closely associated with gold that they can be exploration targets in the search for gold since they are much easier to detect. Such elements are known as pathfinder elements.

The best geophysical exploration techniques to use in the search for these types of ore deposits are those that map out fault structures. Techniques employing electromagnetic and magnetic technology would be of little assistance, as the amount of metallic minerals in the veins is usually limited. These vein systems are planar objects with a much greater length and depth than width, and they are hosted in solid rock. As a result, they are not usually amenable to open-pit mining operations but, rather, are exploited via underground methods.

The author is a professor of geology at Memorial University in St. John's, Nfld.

New Message

Please login to post a reply

AGORACOM Quick Tips

Small-Cap CEO Lessons - Is Your CEO Out Of Touch? ... Not Anymore

President's D.D.

New feature: Hub Presidents can add important links here.

Hub Leaders