Ontario Mineral Inventory

Ontario Geological Survey
Permanent Link to this Record: MDI000000000187

Record: MDI000000000187

General

Mineral Record Identification
Record Name(s) Abyss Zone - 2004
Related Record Type
Related Record(s)
Record Status Occurrence
Date Created 2006-Dec-18
Date Last Modified 2022-Oct-11
Created By
Revised By

Commodities

Primary Commodities: Gold

Secondary Commodities: Silver



Location

Township or Area: Tarp Lake Area

Latitude: 51° 33' 31.33"    Longitude: -90° 2' 52.83"

UTM Zone: 15    Easting: 704622   Northing: 5716088    UTM Datum: NAD83

Resident Geologist District: Thunder Bay North

NTS Grid: 52O09SE

Point Location Description: Sample 912165 location from Assessment report 20000001524

Location Method: Data Compilation



Exploration History

2002: MetalCORP Ltd. staked the property. 2004-5: MetalCORP carried out prospecting and sampling.


Assessment Work on File

Assessment Work on File
Office File Number Online Assessment File Identifier Online Assessment File Directory
2.32421 20000001524 20000001524

Geology

Province: Superior

Subprovince: Uchi

Terrane: North Caribou

Domain: Uchi

Belt: Pickle Lake

Geological Age: Mesoarchean  



Geology Comments

Dec 18, 2006 (Mark Puumala) - The Tarp Lake area gold prospects and occurrences are located in the northern portion of the Pickle Lake Greenstone Belt. These occurrences are found within a mafic metavolcanic rock dominated supracrustal sequence identified by Young (2003) as being part of the > 2860 Ma Pickle Crow Assemblage. According to Young (2003), the Pickle Crow assemblage is dominated by massive and pillowed mafic metavolcanic flows with subordinate (likely synvolcanic) gabbroic sills. MacTavish (2006) describes the mafic metavolcanic flows as being commonly well-foliated to schistose, amphibolitized, and often finely-amygdaloidal. In addition, MacTavish (2006) indicates that the mafic metavolcanics include units of pillow and hyaloclastite breccia. The gabbroic sills are described by MacTavish (2006) as fine- to coarse-grained gabbro, melagabro and ferrogabbro sills up to 200 m thick. The mafic metavolcanics are intercalated with thin, laterally continuous banded iron formation and small, discontinuous lenses of intermediate to felsic metavolcanics. A significant 90 to 125 m thick northeast-trending unit of felsic to intermediate tuff breccia to pyroclastic breccia has been reported in this area by MacTavish. Relatively thin units (up to 70 m thick) of clastic metasedimentary rocks have also been reported by MacTavish (2006). All lithologies are intruded by semi-concordant feldspar porphyry dikes. These dikes are reported by MacTavish (2006) to vary widely in thickness and lateral continuity. MacTavish (2006) also indicates that all lithologies are crosscut by late biotite lamprophyre dikes that are up to 5 m in thickness. One of these dikes is reported to contain ultramafic and country rock xenoliths, red garnets and greenish diopside. Stratigraphy in the Tarp Lake area generally faces toward the northwest, except where asymmetric folding (mainly further to the southeast in the Pickle Crow mine area) has caused reversals in the younging direction (Young 2003). The dominant geological structure in the Tarp Lake area is the Tarp Lake Shear Zone. This structure strikes northeast and forms a wide, diffuse and anastamosing deformation zone that is poorly exposed and characterized (MacTavish 2006). The mafic metavolcanic rocks affected by this shear zone are characterized by moderate to intense carbonatization, sericitization and local silicification (MacTavish 2006). This alteration zone hosts the numerous gold occurrences throughout the area. Many of the more significant gold prospects appear to be located where the Tarp Lake Shear Zone is intersected by splays and/or later fault/shear zones, or relatively competent lithological units such as porphyry intrusions, gabbro and iron formation. The cross-cutting deformation zones are most commonly reported to strike approximately northwest, east-west and north-northeast. Similar complex faulting/shearing patterns have been noted nearby by MacQueen (1987) in the vicinity of the Pickle Crow gold mine, and by McAuley and Winter (1990) in the vicinity of a number of gold occurrences in the July Falls area.




Lithology

Lithology Data
Rock Type Rank Composition Texture Relationship
Mafic lava flow-unsubdivided 1 Adjacent

Mineralization

Mineralization and Alteration
Rank Mineral Name Class Economic Mineral Type Alteration Mineral Type Alteration Ranking Alteration Intensity Alteration Style
1PyriteEconomicOre
2ChalcopyriteEconomicOre
SilicaAlterationSilicification1
CarbonateAlterationCarbonatization2

Mineralization Comments

Dec 18, 2006 (Mark Puumala) - The Abyss Zone Occurrence is described by MacTavish (2006) as consisting of a series of white to rusty, sulphide-rich, subparallel quartz veins and veinlets. The quartz vein system occurs within fine-grained mafic metavolcanic rocks and has a minimum width of 20 m and a minimum strike-length of 90 m. The veins vary in with from a few millimeters to 30 cm, and are strongly-deformed in some places (MacTavish 2006). The veins contain between 2 and 30% disseminated, coarsely-blebby and stringered pyrite and trace chalcopyrite. The mafic metavolcanics adjacent to the veins are silicified and carbonatized, variably-pyritic and occasionally brecciated. Grab samples of quartz vein material assayed up to 6.66 g/t Au and 14 ppm Ag, while altered mafic metavolcanics assayed as high as 3.04 g/t Au (MacTavish 2006).



Mineral Record Details

Classification
RankClassification            
1 Lode (Gold)
Characteristics
Rank Characteristic            
1 Vein

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For detailed information regarding this mineral record please contact the Thunder Bay North Resident Geologist District Office