Geology of the Clinton Creek asbestos deposit of Cassiar Resources Limited

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
D. R. BUDINSKI
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
4
File Size:
4004 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1984

Abstract

Clinton Creek Mine in west-central Yukon produced 0.94 million tonnes of fibre from 15 million tonnes of asbestos ore between 1968 and 1978. The mine closed in 1978. The deposit lies along the margin of a medium sized ultramafic pluton that intrudes schistose and gneissic rocks of the Yukon Metamorphic Complex. Country rocks are metamorphic equivalents of a mixed sedimentary and volcanic assemblage deposited during Precambrian or early Paleozaic time. Movement along the north west-trending Tintina Fault System probably caused the fairly high meromorphic grade that altered the original rocks to schists and gneisses. The ultramafic pluton hosting Clinton Creek Mine is one of several bodies that were emplaced along a deep seated imbricate fault system parallel to the Tintina Trench. Most of rhe intrusions were hydrothermally altered to serpentinite, bur apparently only the one at Clinton Creek contains commercial quantities of asbestos. The Clinton Creek pluton was probably injecred slowly at relatively low temperatures into the crustal rocks as a "mush" that cooled gradually, allowing sufficient time for serpentinization and chrysotile fibre crystallizarion.
Citation

APA: D. R. BUDINSKI  (1984)  Geology of the Clinton Creek asbestos deposit of Cassiar Resources Limited

MLA: D. R. BUDINSKI Geology of the Clinton Creek asbestos deposit of Cassiar Resources Limited. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1984.

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