Alaska Treasure; Nevada Creek Mine, Juneau District, Juneau Borough, Alaska, USA
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Geology: The Alaska Treasure Mine was discovered in 1884. No development work was done until 1904-1905 when a road was constructed from the beach to the mine site (Redman and others, 1989). A 20-stamp mill was installed in 1906 and development continued intermittently until 1916. Approximately 800 tons of ore was mined but detailed production records are not available. The mine was explored by BP Minerals in the late 1980's and by Hecla Mining Company in 1990 and 1991(Bundtzen and others, 1991; Swainbank and others, 1991). The main workings are a 3,350-foot adit with 760 feet of drifts. Other workings include the 657-foot Hudson Tunnel with 280 feet of drifts, 2 other adits, and 3 shafts. There is a total of 5,509 feet of underground workings. The host rocks at the mine are quartz-feldspar-sericite phyllite intercalated with volcanic metaconglomerate and pale green, chlorite phyllite (Wells and others, 1986). The felsic phyllite is locally silicified and sericitized. It contains up to 5 percent disseminated pyrite and thin concordant bands of pyrite, galena, chalcopyrite, sphalerite, pyrrhotite, and tetrahedrite in a gangue of quartz and dolomite. The bands are up to 2 inches thick and can be traced for nearly 300 feet. Quartz veins containing up to 30 percent pyrite, galena, chalcopyrite and sphalerite also occur at the mine, but they are distant from the sulfide-rich zones in the felsic phyllite. U.S. Bureau of Mines samples contained up to 75.4 ppm gold, 47.0 ppm silver, 3.7 percent lead, and 5.1 percent zinc (Redman and others, 1989). A 275-pound metallurgical sample collected by the U.S. Bureau of Mines assayed 3.9 ppm gold; a cyanide-amenability test recovered 77.6 percent of the gold. The Bureau has calculated an indicated resource of 240,000 tons of ore with 0.1 ounce of gold per ton, and an inferred resource of 5.6 million tons of ore with 0.05 ounce of gold per ton (Redman and others, 1989). The deposit is similar to the Yakima (JU207), Red Diamond (JU232), Mammoth (JU229), and Homestake prospects (JU231), which Newberry and others (1997) interpret as Cretaceous volcanogenic massive sulfide deposits. Southeastern Douglas Island is underlain mainly by Upper Jurassic to mid-Cretaceous, marine argillite and graywacke, interbedded with basaltic volcanic and volcaniclastic rocks (Brew and Ford, 1985). The strata are regionally metamorphosed to prehnite-pumpellyite or greenschist grade.
Workings: The Alaska Treasure Mine was discovered in 1884. No development work was done until 1904-1905 when a road was constructed from the beach to the mine site (Redman and others, 1989). A 20-stamp mill was installed in 1906 and development continued intermittently until 1916. The mine was explored by BP Minerals in the late 1980's and by Hecla Mining Company in 1990 and 1991(Bundtzen and others, 1991; Swainbank and others, 1991). The main workings at the mine are a 3,350-foot adit with 760 feet of drifts. Other workings include the 657-foot Hudson Tunnel with 280 feet of drifts, 2 other adits, and 3 shafts. There is a total of 5,509 feet of underground workings.
Age: Newberry and others (1997) have interpreted this deposit as a Cretaceous volcanogenic massive sulfide deposit.
Alteration: Sericitization, silicification, and pyritization.
Production: Approximately 800 tons of ore was mined but production records are not available.
Reserves: The U.S. Bureau of Mines has calculated an indicated resource of 240,000 tons of ore with 0.1 ounce of gold per ton, and an inferred resource of 5.6 million tons of ore with 0.05 ounce of gold per ton (Redman and others, 1989).
Commodities (Major) - Ag, Au, Pb, Zn; (Minor) - Cu
Development Status: Yes; small
Deposit Model: Metamorphosed Kuroko massive sulfide deposit (Cox and Singer, 1986; model 28a)
Mineral List
10 entries listed. 9 valid minerals.
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References
Brew, D.A., and Ford, A.B., 1985, Preliminary reconnaissance geologic map of the Juneau, Taku River, Atlin, and part of the Skagway 1:250,000 quadrangles, southeastern Alaska: U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 85-395, 23 p., 2 sheets, scale 1:250,000. Bundtzen, T.K., Swainbank, R.C., Wood, J.E., Clough, A.H., 1991, Alaska's Mineral Industry 1991: Alaska Division of Geological & Geophysical Surveys, Special Report 46, 89 p. Newberry, R.J., Crafford, T.C., Newkirk, S.R., Young, L.E., Nelson, S.W., and Duke, N.A., 1997, Volcanogenic massive sulfide deposits of Alaska, in Goldfarb, R.J. and Miller, L. D., eds., Mineral deposits of Alaska: Economic Geology Monograph 9, p. 120-150. Redman, E.C., Maas, K.M., Kurtak, J.M., and Miller, L.D., 1989, Bureau of Mines Mineral Investigations in the Juneau Mining District, Alaska, 1984-1988, Volume 2--Detailed mine, prospect, and mineral occurrence descriptions, Section D, Juneau Gold Belt Subarea: U.S. Bureau of Mines Special Publication, 424 p. Swainbank, R.C., Bundtzen, T.K., and Wood, J.E., 1991, Alaska's mineral industry, 1990: Alaska Division of Geological and Geophysical Surveys Special Report 45, 78 p. Wells, D.E., Pittman, T.L., Brew, D.A. and Douglass, S.L., 1986, Map and description of the mineral deposits in the Juneau, Taku River, Atlin, and part of the Skagway quadrangles, Alaska: U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 85-717, 332 p., 1 sheet, scale 1:250,000.