28. Delbridge Mine - Case History of a Lithochemical Ore Discovery

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Julian Boldy
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
4
File Size:
231 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1991

Abstract

The discovery of the Delbridge massive sulfide deposit in the Noranda district of Quebec resulted from an appreciation of the significance of a mercury leakage haloas a lithochemical pathfinder to blind ore, coupled to its location relative to a geologically inferred ore-bearing horizon within complex volcanic stratigraphy. Systematic sampling of microfractures present in outcrops delineated a diagnostic anomaly, drawing attention to an area considered prospective for buried ore. The massive sulfide deposit was subsequently found to be blind and topped at the 107-m (350-ft) level. This case history is presented in the context of its time and was the first volcanogenic ore deposit to be discovered utilizing mercury as a pathfinder in the Canadian Precambrian. The case history also illustrates that the practical application of an innovative technique coupled to a new geological interpretation can result in success, even on a property that was centrally located in a mining district and had undergone intensive exploration efforts over a 38-year period.
Citation

APA: Julian Boldy  (1991)  28. Delbridge Mine - Case History of a Lithochemical Ore Discovery

MLA: Julian Boldy 28. Delbridge Mine - Case History of a Lithochemical Ore Discovery. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1991.

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