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GEOLOGICAL REPORT OF PLATEAU METALS LIMITED'S CLAIMS ADAMS PLATEAU,CHASE,B.C. 1190 S-alJJ 510 STANLEY J; PEDLEY WORKSUPERVISED BY DR. C. RILEY April 1, to November 21,1951. y,7 /yip E , IhQEx Summary 1 Introduction 1 Topography 2 Claim Geology 2 Sedimentary Rocks 3 Metamorphic Rocks 4 Volcanics 5 Gneiss 6 Intrusive 6 Structures 7 Mineralization 9 Correlation ,,y ( Geological ork Map ffp Rocks of Geology & Geophysics 10 1 In Envelope. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS: Thanks are rendered Gunning, Department to Dr. H.C. of Geology, and examined the thin sections who prepared used in this report. Appreciation Dr. C. Riley, phases P. Eng., of the mapping, Mckdams who helped the field mapping. with Is also felt toward who supervised all and to Keith A. the latter part of GEOLOGICAL REPORT PLATEAU METALS LIMITED 1951 The properties L of Plateau by a series of sedimentary been highly metamorphosed. acid north-south this zone of weakness, Me&.'as are underlain and volcanic These are cut dykes and north-south is widespread. copper, Folds, dams and shear which have by basic faults. zinc, favourable or fissure rocks and Along snd lead mineralization replacement horizon, zones are the localizers dyke of this mineralization. Geophysical these methods were successful In finding horizons. INTRODUCTION The Plateau north property of Shuswap Lake between Creek Valleys. dirt building, is along a rough, road. on, together stripping lies the Adams Lake and Scotch the summer of 1951, geological During north The plateau Access to the property good-weather, was carried is located on the Adams Plateau. of Chase, B.C., L Metals with with geophysical bulldozers mapping mapping, road and diamond drilling. Mapping was based on the chain and compass lines which were laid intervals. by transit. lines out for the geophysical The main base lines on this Happing beyond the limits was carried on with survey grid at 400' were surveyed of the geophysical pace and compass traverses. - 2 - TOPOGHAPKY The center of the old Adams Plateau surface is deeply Creek. The west fork center of Plateau creek, in and is west it rises along central there parts feet land consists deep. In this Local creeks. above running It evergreens valleys claims, close has an cover on the a balsam and is moderate and by the creeks. on the high with of residual outcrops To the 800’ a ridge Windfall is blanketed stream is relatively to a point forms of this of the property. occur largely area parallel of the predominates. Good outcrops the 6,000’. is heavy undergrowth cover the land Lower in the creek and eastern The remaining through meadows amid scattered slopes. forest small the limits Nikwikwaia. To the east of land of approximately the higher runs but steadily This height Alpine creek of the claims, unevenly northeasterly flowing Metals’holdings. cut by several the creek. spruce of this the limits flat elevation cut by the south peneplalned overburden. soils and glacial are mostly western five deposits found in ridge. This to twenty also the creek occur. bottoms and cutbanks. CLAIM GEOLOGY The rocks a high degree schistosity strikes northwest. within of regional planes the property metamorphism. and composition to the northeast with dips have all undergone Bedding planes, bands show consistant averaging 200 to the 3 - - In the western of the rocks local limey argillites these amphibole lie rocks masked, a series and quartsites a horizon rich which schists near the contacts the schists in turn there of were mapped. of chlorite horizons Beneath intrusives, volcanic where the characteristics were not completely limestones, Underneath area, with of basic is a series were underlain of by a gneiss. SEDIbENTARY ROCKS The younger west of the property, them as having divided rocks, those which show sufficient a sedimentary outcrop evidence origin. In turn on the to classify they can be as follows: Arsillltes These light green ridges. They have a moderate l/8 to l/4 inch and limestones inch to grey rocks lime bedding content bands. are contained form low broken and often show Lenses of quartsite within them. Ouartzites These form highly veins of quartz bedding resistant are present, ridges. The outcrops Edany fissure show some but are commonly massive. Limestone% Low, slumped outcrops coloured quartzites. calcite horizons limestone of light are found between They contain and otherwise are coarsely fine closely the argillites recrystallized resemble crystalline A second black green to grey limestone and seams of the argillite. and are a true is also Some marble. present. It is 4 - characterized - by bands up to l/2 weathering recrystallized inches thick of cream- calcite. MEXAMORPHICROCKS Underlying metamorphic rocks the sediments whose origin is a horizon is unknown. These are predominately rock is showing contains banded with green chlorite a schistose to gneissic pyrite alteration or magnetite phase near certain an amphibole chlorite mediate rock. and white crystals basic This calcite commonly it up to l/4’: An dykes was mapped as examination of three schists, Chlorite Schist - much biotite thin sections one of an inter- phase and one of the amphibole The summary of the descriptions 1. schists. structure. one of the chlorite contact chlorite schist. A microscopic was made -- of bearing is as follows: or Gneiss and chlorite - lo;‘: quartz - Feldspar - sodic plagioclase - less than the quartz - much calcite - abundant epidote - a few cubes of pyrite - streaks of spots of a clay product(leucoxene?) -59 2. Schistose phase of Amphibole A granulated highly - rock gneissic Schist. foliation recrystallized. Feldspar - Little probably sodic plagioclase or no quartz - Chlorite - green - Epidote residual and much fine - Leucoxene 3. with Clorlte Amphibole gralned epidote - some titanite gone over leucoxene Chlorite - 35,i greenish - 35% epidote to Schist . to buff amphibole and clinozoisite - 10 - 15s fresh - Calcite of some amphibole (secondar minerals T feldspar - plagioclase to oligoclase intergranular to other replacing amphibole close minerals - Chlorite a few nests and intergrowths possibly metamorphosed from an igneous VOLCANICS A series These are mostly traps with of volcanic massive, a few thin dark, felsite their attitude the volcanics. fine bands. shows one or two bands of white bedded with rocks underlie to medium grained The upper crystalline The outcrops is not determinable. the schists. section marble are massive interand and rock. - 6 - GNEISS In the southeast highly siliceous dark minerals. there feldspars A fine was mapped across is with some bands are regular and quartz to the sedimentary grained rock resembling the northern claims as quartsite. Here the highly altered contains amounts of introduced their from large original nature the gneiss and folded formations. the gneiss of the property country quartz completely. in thattfie However, light to dark rock ivhich mask it bands are highly and are generally a rock and white The composition and dip parallel outcrops 131s d=rk reddish gneiss. composed of pink strike corner differs contorted green in colour, MICROSCOPE A thin Fine grained quarts. swirled Some feldspar of this rock and folded Much chlorite Much epidote This section after it is summarized thus: shows much granular a green amphibole. and soisite. 1 to 2$ Intergrowth may be an altered with sedimentary quartz mosaic. rock, JNTRUSIVE ROCKS The oldest to medium grained radiolites amygdules intrusive black dykes. of a green amphibole of calcite. rocks are a series These contained of fine small and commonly contained - 7 - The dykes occur have steep dips few strike coast-west. to a green sand. singly and most strike refracturing Contacts Magnetite, small were relatively fresh, No ferro-magnesium the nearby and feldspar minerals nearby They also country rock pyrite. These acid wherever they is rock rock and rhyolite. with fine to This rock very minor pyrite, are present. are dyke like follow a north Is saturated rocks white in form wlth south with trend. quartz uneven The and minor form high resistant ridges occur. A contact of this and pyrite country is a fresh porphyritic, These intrusions contacts. showing of amphibole chalcopyrite intrusive medium grained,sometimes of quarts quickly and drag folds. The youngest consists a alterations. by the development pyrrhotite, shears although weather are commonly found replacing filling They rocks and no metamorphic are characterized ml.nerals. north-south These basic These intrusives little and in swarms. within the younger with the basic the rhyolite dykes show xenoliths indicating the latter of the two. STRUCTURES Folding Most attitudes easterly strike However, local observed. were also of the rocks gentle Many small seen. taken folds revealed with a consistant a shallow up to 100 feet dra:; folds southwest northdip. wide were under a foot in amplitude * 8 - Faulting Two large faults were mapped. One along West Fork Creek and one along Shmoo Creek. isolated gouge and breccia of others. 'However, prevents the construction the country. breccias follow The fault often vuggy, and microcrystalline width. with the north-south quantities quartz. trend by local is common and at green fluorite Gouge bands are found up to five by creek the fault is feet in zones are represented valleys. Bdinor fractures They usually have less commonly perpendicular Graphite of both crystalline Pyrite crystalling Topographically white picture. zone is characterized Shmoo Creek a coarsely abundant. the presence number of outcrops of a fuller These faL:lts Numerous zones indicate the limited the are common over all than a foot chlorite displacement to the schistose commonly forms along and sericite and are or bedding the slips forms the property. planes. in the sediment along the slips in the schists. )UNERAI,IZATION On the present first It encouraging consisted chalcopyrite there feet survey find Plateau of a few large replacement. Further in the spring anomalies existed holdings,the was made by prospectors was a mineralized thick. Metals' boulders carrying These suggested zone which could promise was given in 1950. rich that nearby be over four by a geophysical of 1951 which showed a number of in this area. Bulldozer on later 9 stripping and diamond drilling In the year Bulldozing which was later be summarized explore supplied confirmed this much valuable zone. information by diamond drilling. This can as followsr Sulphide the property. to further was carried mineralization Several loci is widespread of mineralization beds - Horizons across are recognized, 1. Favourable 2. Damming - The basic dykes occasionally acted as dams to the circulating mineralizing fluids leaving the "favourable beds" on one side of them richly replaced. 3. Folds - The shallow folds concentrated mineralization at the apex of the anticlines. This is also true in the case of smaller drag folds. 4. Slips and fractures of ten contained of chalcopyrite and pyrite. 5. Contact replacement - particularly contacts of some basic dykes. Any one or combination is considered as favourable Pyrhotite, common and galena, chlorite present schist horizons in the lavas fine of the first sphalerite seams on the four of these locations. is predominately molybdenite The deposition to replacement true prospecting The mineralization chalcopyrite. favourable pyrite and magnetite and hematite and are are also present, of the minerals favoured the but interesting deposits are also and quartzites. - 10 - CORRELATIOI: OF GEOLOGYAND GEOPHYSICS k geophysical the property Ltd. plored early geological were found sediments 2. bearing ex- certain within fell close bearing schists favourable the to shear they zone. followed horizons or of horizons. On the east apparently zone. graphite the chlorite mineral 3. with of the property the anomalies defined Within series to correlate and later These were as follows: On the west well on by XcPhar Geophysics mapped on the survey horizons. 1. Survey was conducted in the spring The anomalies in detail E.U. of the followea property one anomaly a mineralized shear COSTS OF GEOLOGICAL SURWZ - PLATiZAUMET.&LSLIMITED SEMOi? OF 1951 S.J. haleg K.A.McAdam Dr.C.Rilsy S.A.Sc. Geologist Asst.Geologlst Consultant July 22-31 7 Aug.1.31 2 SepLl-30 735 .Aug.l9Sept.15 July 22. Sept.30 25 10 $15.00 $900.00 $9.00 $225.00 835.00 $350.00 $1475.00 c. Riley. Ihc;;ber 27,1951.