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Chloride Prospect, Kantishna Mining District, Denali Borough, Alaska, USAi
Regional Level Types
Chloride ProspectProspect
Kantishna Mining DistrictMining District
Denali BoroughBorough
AlaskaState
USACountry

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Latitude & Longitude (WGS84):
63° 33' 7'' North , 150° 53' 2'' West
Latitude & Longitude (decimal):
KΓΆppen climate type:
Mindat Locality ID:
196912
Long-form identifier:
mindat:1:2:196912:5
GUID (UUID V4):
48f30bca-3c3f-4094-8c1e-f18994a20d7e


The Chloride prospect is in Denali National Park and Preserve.
Location: The Chloride prospect is at an elevation of about 3200 to 3500 feet, on the south flank of the ridge east of the head of Lucky Gulch. The Chloride claim abuts the Jupiter-Mars claim (MM102), and is in the center of the SW1/4 SE1/4, section 5, T. 16 S., R. 17 W., Fairbanks Meridian. The site is at the approximate discovery cut and is accurate within about 300 feet. The Chloride (called the Chlorine) prospect corresponds to location 37 of Bundtzen (1981), and occurrence 55 of Thornsberry, McKee, and Salisbury (1984). Thornsberry, McKee, and Salisbury (1984, loc. 51) show the Chloride prospect on their map of the Jupiter-Mars prospect.
Geology: The country rock at the Chloride prospect is mainly metafelsite of the lower Paleozoic Spruce Creek sequence (Bundtzen, 1981). Chloritic phyllite crops out at the eastern end of the Chloride claim, and a Tertiary diabase dike crops out north of its eastern end (Thornsberry, McKee, and Salisbury, 1984, v. 2, map of occurrence 51). The Chloride deposit is a mineralized shear zone containing sulfide-bearing, quartz-calcite-clay veins and stringers. Float, rubble crop, and soil analyses indicate that the zone is as much as 800 feet wide and generally is at least 100 feet wide. The zone strikes N70-75E on the western part of the Chloride claim, and about N80-85E near its east end. The zone, as confirmed in drill holes, is nearly vertical. The ore minerals are mainly arsenopyrite and pyrite. Galena is locally abundant, and sphalerite, apparently dissolved from most of the surface ore, occurs in drill core. Assays show 1 to 5 percent arsenic, up to 20 percent lead, and 3.55 percent zinc. Limonite and scorodite(?) are locally abundant near-surface oxidation products. A zinc halo, marked by zinc assays greater than 0.1 percent, surrounds the deposit. Quartz at the surface commonly is limonite stained, vuggy, and brecciated. Including mineralization on the Jupiter-Mars claim, Thornsberry, McKee, and Salisbury (1984, v. 2, occurrence 55) estimated a resource of 103,760 tons or ore grading 0.062 ounce of gold per ton and 5.97 ounces of silver per ton. In 1983, the U.S. Bureau of Mines drilled two core holes (K-12 and K-14) on the Chloride claim (Thornsberry, McKee, and Salisbury, 1984, v. 2, occurrences 51 and 55, and drill logs). Hole K-12 was drilled northerly across the lode from near the midpoint of the south claim sideline. Between 215 feet and 268 feet, the hole intersected mineralized quartz breccia and sheared, silicified metafelsite. The richest part of this intercept is between 224.7 and 226.5 feet, which assayed 0.063 ounce of gold per ton, 7.31 ounces of silver per ton, and 4.15 percent lead. The average assay of about 52 feet of core commencing at 215 feet was 0.017 ounce of gold per ton, 0.656 ounce of silver per ton, 0.11 percent copper, 0.86 percent lead, 0.76 percent zinc, and 1.2 percent arsenic. Core recovery was relatively poor, and the values are probably minimal. Drill hole K-14, collared about 300 feet east-northeast of hole K-12, encountered a similar section. An intercept of 54 feet commencing at 309.2 feet averaged 0.014 ounce of gold per ton, 2.15 percent zinc, and 1.2 percent arsenic (Thornsberry, McKee, and Salisbury, 1984, v. 2). Silver either was not determined or not reported in hole K-14. Zinc is nearly ubiquitous. Most check assays of core in hole K-14 from 75 feet to 309.2 feet exceed 0.1 percent zinc, as do check assays of core in hole K-12 from 110 feet to 215 feet. In these intervals, the metafelsite hostrock is argillized and cut by thin veinlets of quartz, calcite, and clay.
Workings: William Taylor probably prospected the Chloride deposit in the 1920s, at the same time that he explored the Jupiter-Mars (then the Damon and Pythias) deposit (Wells, 1933). In 1976, Hawley and Associates (1978, fig. 4.1-A(1)-4) conducted a soil survey on the Chloride and Jupiter-Mars claims. In 1983, the U.S. Bureau of Mines drilled two holes on the Chloride claim (Thornsberry, McKee, and Salisbury, 1984, v. 2).
Age: The deposit is assumed to be Eocene (see record MM091).
Alteration: Extensive silicification and argillization of the metafelsite hostrock. Oxidation of iron and arsenic minerals.
Reserves: Thornsberry, McKee, and Salisbury (1984, v. 2) computed a partly drill- based resource of 103,760 tons of ore grading 0.062 ounce of gold per ton, 5.97 ounces of silver per ton, and significant lead and zinc. A larger resource can be inferred from the extent of mineralization on the claim. Based on a width of 50 feet, strike length of 1000 feet, depth of 500 feet, and estimated average of surface and subsurface sample assays, there is a resource of about 2,000,000 tons of rock grading about 0.025 ounce of gold per ton and 1 ounce of silver per ton. The low-grade, gold-silver deposit at the Chloride prospect probably is the best-defined bulk-mineable target in the Kantishna Hills lode area (MM091). The deposit would have been too low-grade and remote to mine when the nearby Banjo deposit was being mined in 1939-41, but it is within the grade and tonnage range of a modern, small, open-pit mine. Drilling, metallurgical study, and other research would be required to define an economic deposit.

Commodities (Major) - Ag, Au; (Minor) - As, Cu, Pb, Zn
Development Status: None
Deposit Model: Low-sulfide Au-quartz vein, possibly grading into a polymetallic vein (Cox and

Select Mineral List Type

Standard Detailed Gallery Strunz Chemical Elements

Commodity List

This is a list of exploitable or exploited mineral commodities recorded at this locality.


Mineral List


8 valid minerals.

Gallery:

List of minerals arranged by Strunz 10th Edition classification

Group 2 - Sulphides and Sulfosalts
β“˜Sphalerite2.CB.05aZnS
β“˜Galena2.CD.10PbS
β“˜Pyrite2.EB.05aFeS2
β“˜Arsenopyrite2.EB.20FeAsS
β“˜Jamesonite2.HB.15Pb4FeSb6S14
Group 4 - Oxides and Hydroxides
β“˜Quartz4.DA.05SiO2
β“˜'Stibiconite'4.DH.20Sb3+Sb5+2O6(OH)
Group 5 - Nitrates and Carbonates
β“˜Calcite5.AB.05CaCO3
Group 8 - Phosphates, Arsenates and Vanadates
β“˜Scorodite8.CD.10Fe3+AsO4 Β· 2H2O
Unclassified
β“˜'Clay minerals'-
β“˜'Limonite'-

List of minerals for each chemical element

HHydrogen
Hβ“˜ ScoroditeFe3+AsO4 · 2H2O
Hβ“˜ StibiconiteSb3+Sb25+O6(OH)
CCarbon
Cβ“˜ CalciteCaCO3
OOxygen
Oβ“˜ CalciteCaCO3
Oβ“˜ QuartzSiO2
Oβ“˜ ScoroditeFe3+AsO4 · 2H2O
Oβ“˜ StibiconiteSb3+Sb25+O6(OH)
SiSilicon
Siβ“˜ QuartzSiO2
SSulfur
Sβ“˜ ArsenopyriteFeAsS
Sβ“˜ GalenaPbS
Sβ“˜ JamesonitePb4FeSb6S14
Sβ“˜ PyriteFeS2
Sβ“˜ SphaleriteZnS
CaCalcium
Caβ“˜ CalciteCaCO3
FeIron
Feβ“˜ ArsenopyriteFeAsS
Feβ“˜ JamesonitePb4FeSb6S14
Feβ“˜ PyriteFeS2
Feβ“˜ ScoroditeFe3+AsO4 · 2H2O
ZnZinc
Znβ“˜ SphaleriteZnS
AsArsenic
Asβ“˜ ArsenopyriteFeAsS
Asβ“˜ ScoroditeFe3+AsO4 · 2H2O
SbAntimony
Sbβ“˜ JamesonitePb4FeSb6S14
Sbβ“˜ StibiconiteSb3+Sb25+O6(OH)
PbLead
Pbβ“˜ GalenaPbS
Pbβ“˜ JamesonitePb4FeSb6S14

Other Databases

Link to USGS - Alaska:MM099

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