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Doran Prospect, Juneau Mining District, Juneau, Alaska, USAi
Regional Level Types
Doran ProspectProspect
Juneau Mining DistrictMining District
JuneauCity Borough
AlaskaState
USACountry

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Latitude & Longitude (WGS84):
58° 20' 47'' North , 134° 28' 47'' West
Latitude & Longitude (decimal):
Köppen climate type:
Nearest Settlements:
PlacePopulationDistance
Juneau32,756 (2017)6.1km
Mindat Locality ID:
197256
Long-form identifier:
mindat:1:2:197256:9
GUID (UUID V4):
860e3558-4911-4df5-994a-0c99cf97cb6e


Location: The Doran prospect is at an elevation of approximately 500 feet on the west end of Blackerby Ridge. It is 1/2 mile northeast of Gastineau Channel, and overlooks the subdivision of Vanderbilt Hill. The prospect is in the NE1/4NE1/4 section 5, T. 41 S., R. 67 E. of the Copper River Meridian. The location is accurate.
Geology: The Doran deposit was discovered in 1889 and developed by a 100-foot adit and a 180-foot adit. The deposit consists of quartz-albite-carbonate veinlets in a shattered, sheared, and altered albite-diorite dike( Knopf, 1912). U.S. Bureau of Mines samples did not contain significant metal values (Redman and others, 1989). This prospect is in the Juneau Gold Belt, which consists of more than 200 gold-quartz-vein deposits that have produced nearly 7 million ounces of gold. These gold-bearing mesothermal quartz vein systems form a zone 160 km long by 5 to 8 km wide along the western margin of the Coast Mountains. The vein systems are in or near shear zones adjacent to west-verging, mid-Cretaceous thrust faults. The veins are hosted by diverse, variably metamorphosed, sedimentary, volcanic, and intrusive rocks. From the Coast Mountains batholith westward, the host rocks include mixed metasedimentary and metavolcanic sequences of Carboniferous and older, Permian and Triassic, and Jurassic-Cretaceous age. The sequences are juxtaposed along mid-Cretaceous thrust faults (Miller and others, 1994). The sequences are intruded by mid-Cretaceous to middle Eocene plutons, mainly diorite, tonalite, granodiorite, quartz monzonite, and granite. Sheetlike tonalite plutons emplaced just east of the Juneau Gold Belt and undeformed granite and granodiorite bodies that are emplaced farther to the east are between 55 and 48 Ma (Gehrels and others, 1991). The structural grain of the belt is defined by northwest-striking, moderately to steeply northeast-dipping, penetrative foliation that developed between Cretaceous and Eocene time (Miller and others, 1994). The majority of the veins in the Juneau Gold Belt strike northwest. Isotopic dates indicate that the auriferous veins in the Juneau Gold Belt formed between 56 and 55 Ma (Miller and others, 1994; Goldfarb and others, 1997).
Workings: The Doran deposit was discovered in 1889 and developed by a 100-foot adit and a 180-foot adit.
Age: Isotopic dates indicate that the auriferous veins in the Juneau Gold Belt formed between 56 and 55 Ma (Miller and others, 1994; Goldfarb and others, 1997).
Alteration: Dike is albitized.

Commodities (Major) - Au ?
Development Status: None
Deposit Model: Low-sulfide Au-quartz vein (Cox and Singer, 1986; model 36a)

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Standard Detailed Gallery Strunz Chemical Elements

Mineral List


1 valid mineral.

Gallery:

List of minerals arranged by Strunz 10th Edition classification

Group 4 - Oxides and Hydroxides
Quartz4.DA.05SiO2

List of minerals for each chemical element

OOxygen
O QuartzSiO2
SiSilicon
Si QuartzSiO2

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Link to USGS - Alaska:JU128

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