SUMMARY AND RECOMMENDATIONS

The SLAM Property consists of three claims; Grand, Slam and Strike claims which are 100 % owned by North American Metals Corp (NAMC), located in northwestern British Columbia, at 58 ' 12'N latitude and 132 ' 07'W longitude on NTS sheets 104K/01E and 104K/08E, approximately 70 kil...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Vc G, Jane M. Howe
Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 1992
Subjects:
Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.608.3937
http://aris.empr.gov.bc.ca/arisreports/22697.pdf
Description
Summary:The SLAM Property consists of three claims; Grand, Slam and Strike claims which are 100 % owned by North American Metals Corp (NAMC), located in northwestern British Columbia, at 58 ' 12'N latitude and 132 ' 07'W longitude on NTS sheets 104K/01E and 104K/08E, approximately 70 kilometres NW of Telegraph Creek and 11 kilometres northeast of the Golden Bear Mine. Although the Golden Bear Mine access road passes within 5 kilometres of the southern edge of the property, access can be gained only by helicopter, usually from the Golden Bear Mine or Dease Lake. Previous exploration on the property outlined weakly anomalous gold values, ranging between less than 100 ppb up to 3000 ppb in pyrite-bearing rock with coincident anomalous values of silver, antimony, mercury and molybdenum in soils. These features were interpreted to reflect a high-level epithermal alteration system. Exploration work completed during 1992 consisted of eight line kilometres of Induced Polarization survey. The intent of the survey was to prove or disprove the existence of a large bulk mineable epithermal system beneath the talus. The 1992 Induced Polarization survey did not define any significant, large-scale