Conference Proceedings
Narrow Vein Mining Conference 2012
Conference Proceedings
Narrow Vein Mining Conference 2012
Application of Historical Data to Estimate a Mineral Resource at the Engineer Gold Mine, British Columbia, Canada
The evaluation of historical goldfields is currently topical, reflecting a high gold price, improvements in knowledge and technology._x000D_
and lack of greenfield sites. Many goldfields comprise narrow gold-quartz veins which are structurally complex with an irregular distribution of gold; variable geometry and architecture; and display late deformational effects. The study of historical mine records can be an important tool during early and advanced project evaluation since it contributes to understanding the orebody, exploration target size and setting expectations. The historic Engineer Mine property is located 32 km west of Atlin, British Columbia on the east side of Tagish Lake. The economically important Engineer and Double Decker veins belong to a NNE-SSW vein set. These are narrow, commonly <2 m dilational veins with a minor sinistral strike component and of an epithermal type. documented ore production between 1910 - 1952 is recorded as approximately 14 263 t at 39.4 g t au and 19.5 g t ag (for 18 000 oz au and 8950 oz ag). the underground workings consist of about 5500 m of tunnels, shafts, raises and stopes over eight levels. the mine is currently being re-evaluated. in 2011, an inferred mineral resource of 41 000 t at 19 g t au for 25 000 oz au (at a 5 g t au cut-off) was defined from historical data supported by modern drilling into the engineer and double decker veins. a surface and underground bulk sampling and milling program was undertaken in 2011.citation:dominy, s c and platten, i m, 2012. application of historical data to estimate a mineral resource at the engineer gold mine, british columbia, canada, in proceedings narrow vein mining 2012 , pp 81-100 (the australasian institute of mining and metallurgy: melbourne).>2>
and lack of greenfield sites. Many goldfields comprise narrow gold-quartz veins which are structurally complex with an irregular distribution of gold; variable geometry and architecture; and display late deformational effects. The study of historical mine records can be an important tool during early and advanced project evaluation since it contributes to understanding the orebody, exploration target size and setting expectations. The historic Engineer Mine property is located 32 km west of Atlin, British Columbia on the east side of Tagish Lake. The economically important Engineer and Double Decker veins belong to a NNE-SSW vein set. These are narrow, commonly <2 m dilational veins with a minor sinistral strike component and of an epithermal type. documented ore production between 1910 - 1952 is recorded as approximately 14 263 t at 39.4 g t au and 19.5 g t ag (for 18 000 oz au and 8950 oz ag). the underground workings consist of about 5500 m of tunnels, shafts, raises and stopes over eight levels. the mine is currently being re-evaluated. in 2011, an inferred mineral resource of 41 000 t at 19 g t au for 25 000 oz au (at a 5 g t au cut-off) was defined from historical data supported by modern drilling into the engineer and double decker veins. a surface and underground bulk sampling and milling program was undertaken in 2011.citation:dominy, s c and platten, i m, 2012. application of historical data to estimate a mineral resource at the engineer gold mine, british columbia, canada, in proceedings narrow vein mining 2012 , pp 81-100 (the australasian institute of mining and metallurgy: melbourne).>2>
Contributor(s):
S C Dominy, I M Platten
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Application of Historical Data to Estimate a Mineral Resource at the Engineer Gold Mine, British Columbia, CanadaPDFThis product is exclusive to Digital library subscription
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- Published: 2012
- PDF Size: 1.276 Mb.
- Unique ID: P201202011