Fluorite in British Columbia

- Organization:
- Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
- Pages:
- 1
- File Size:
- 727 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1984
Abstract
The major fluorite producer in British Columbia was the Rock
Candy Mine, inactive since 1942. Other deposits of economic
interest include the Rexspar deposit, in which fluorite is
associated with uranium and rare earth mineralization, and the
Eaglet and Liard River occurrences.
THE former Rock Candy fluorite mine, located 26 km north
of Grand Forks, is the only major past producer of fluorite in
British Columbia. The deposit was in production from 1918 to
1929 and again in 1942; total output was about 36,000 tonnes
with average grade between 22 and 32 per cent CaF2. The
fluorite body occupies a steeply-dipping vein structure,
approximately 175 m long and up to 12 m wide, in porphyritic
syenite. The chief vein-filling minerals are quartz and fluorite
with local small len ses of barite. Fluorite content decreases
with depth and the deposit becomes silicified.
The Rexspar (or Birch Island) fluorite deposit is located 130
km north of Kamloops. The deposit is complex with rare earth
elements and high uranium values, but !1uorite mineralization
forms an independent zone adjacent to the uranium orebodies.
Fluorite is present as fine-grained impregnations and as breccia
cement in strongly schistose or brecciated alkali feld spar porphyry.
Reported reserves are 1,088,000 tonnes of 22 per cent
CaF2 or 450,000 tonnes of 29 per cent CaF2.
268
Another potential deposit of fluorite is Eaglet, situated on
the north side of Quesnel Lake. Fluorite occurs as a stock work
with scattered veins and irregular lenses up to 20 centimetres
wide and as impregnations in altered Proterozoic Kaza Group
feld spathic gneiss over an area of 1,500 metres by 500 metres.
To date (1983) approximately $2 million have been spent on
the exploration of this property and reserves of 18.8 mimon
tonnes grading 11.59 per cent CaF2 have been outlined .
A group of significant occurrences is known from north of
Liard River Hot Springs Park , where fluorite occurs in small
zones up to 17 m thick along the interface between Middle
Devonian Dunedin Formation limestone and Middle Devonian
to Mississippian Besa River Formation argillite.
Fluorite, associated with witherite, barytocalcite and barite,
is present as replacement bodies, breccia fillings and minor
veins.
Citation
APA:
(1984) Fluorite in British ColumbiaMLA: Fluorite in British Columbia. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1984.