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Sleitat Prospect, Bristol Bay Mining District, Dillingham Census Area, Alaska, USAi
Regional Level Types
Sleitat ProspectProspect
Bristol Bay Mining DistrictMining District
Dillingham Census AreaCensus Area
AlaskaState
USACountry

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Latitude & Longitude (WGS84):
60° 2' 43'' North , 157° 4' 55'' West
Latitude & Longitude (decimal):
KΓΆppen climate type:
Nearest Settlements:
PlacePopulationDistance
Koliganek209 (2015)37.1km
Mindat Locality ID:
200020
Long-form identifier:
mindat:1:2:200020:9
GUID (UUID V4):
90b505bb-5d78-4277-9b04-237ae3a55edd


Location: The Sleitat prospect is centered on a saddle at an elevation of 1,725 feet, between the two high peaks of Sleitat Mountain (1,979 and 1,903 feet in elevation). The prospect is near the center of section 31, T. 1 S, R. 45 W. This prospect is accurately located. It is locality 8 of Cobb (1972 [MF 384]; 1976 [OF 76-606]).
Geology: The occurrence of granite and peripheral gold-bearing quartz gash veins was reported on Sleitat Mountain by Mertie (1938, p. 91), but subsequent exploration has shown that the principal mineral deposit is a tin-, tungsten-, and silver-bearing sheeted greisen system (Farnstrom, 1991; Burleigh, 1991; Hudson and Reed, 1997). The greisen deposit was discovered by a Cominco Alaska regional exploration program in 1983, and subsequently evaluated in the mid-1980s by detailed surface mapping, sampling, and diamond drilling (Farnstrom, 1991). A composite granite stock that hosts most of the greisen sharply crosscuts and thermally metamorphoses mid-Cretaceous clastic sedimentary rocks of the Kuskokwim Group. The stock has a discontinuous border zone of medium-grained biotite granite and biotite-muscovite granite, and a core of fine-grained zinnwaldite granite. Felsic porphyry dikes crosscut hornfels peripheral to the stock. A K/Ar age of 56.8 +/- 2.8 Ma on muscovite from a late veinlet was reported by Burleigh (1991, p. 6). Greisen sheets trend east-west and are developed within the biotite-muscovite granite, zinnwaldite granite, and hornfels. The east-west trending cassiterite-bearing greisen zones are nearly vertical quartz-topaz-tourmaline +/- white mica veins and tabular bodies that vary from inches to 20 feet in thickness and coalesce to greater thicknesses in places. They are concentrated in the north half of the stock and in a second zone along the south border that includes some greisen sheets in peripheral hornfels. The individual greisen sheets are granular, massive, separated by less-altered granite, have disseminated clay-lined voids, and have cores that locally contain a few inches of coarse quartz veins carrying high concentrations (50 to 60 percent) of cassiterite (Burleigh, 1991, p. 14). Cassiterite is disseminated in the greisen, concentrated in cores of greisen veins, and in quartz-topaz veins that fill fractures in hornfels. Cassiterite-bearing veins in hornfels are up to 1.5 feet wide and a few hundred feet long. Small amounts of wolframite are disseminated in the greisen but it also occurs with arsenopyrite in quartz veins, especially in hornfels peripheral to greisen zones. Arsenopyrite is common in the greisen and veins. Up to 5 percent lollingite with inclusions of bismite has been identified as disseminations in biotite-muscovite granite (Burleigh, 1991, p. 16). Sphalerite is a minor but common constituent of the greisen and some stannite and chalcopyrite are associated with the sphalerite. One small grain of ferrotantalite was identified during SEM analysis of the greisen (Burleigh, 1991, p. 16). Individual greisen zones locally have high tin grades. For example, one 47.7-foot (true) drill intercept averaged 1.56 percent tin, and included a 5-foot-thick section grading 12.6 percent tin and 5.7 ounces of silver per ton (Farnstrom, 1991; Burleigh, 1991, p. 18). The Sleitat prospect is a deeply eroded tin-bearing system. The sheeted greisens, particularly those on the north side of the stock, are expected to diminish in size and in intensity of cassiterite mineralization at depth. However, mineralization in the relatively wide hornfels zone on the south side of the stock may indicate that the upper contact of the granite body is not steeply dipping there, or that a mineralizing zinnwaldite granite cupola could be present at depth (Hudson and Reed, 1997, p. 461). Burleigh (1991) showed that much of the eroded tin-bearing material had migrated downslope and along the small streams that head against the lode deposit. Solomon Resources Ltd. staked 3,520 acres on the Sleitat prospect in the summer of 2005 (Brett Resources Inc., 2006). They subsequently worked out a joint venture agreement with Brett Resources, Inc., and geologic and geochemical field work began in Sept. 2005. In 2005, Brett commissioned a extensive report on the deposit by William T. Ellis (2006) who analyzed and compiled the previous data on the deposit and did some limited verification sampling. Burleigh (1991) estimated that the Sleitat deposit contained a total of 28.6 million tons of ore with an average grade of 0.37 percent tin, 0.04 percent tungsten and 17 ppm silver. However, Ellis (2006) cautioned that these figures while not necessarily wrong do not meet current industry standards for determining mineral resources.
Workings: The Sleitat prospect was discovered and explored by Cominco Alaska in the 1980s. This work included detailed surface mapping, sampling, and some diamond drilling (Farnstrom, 1991). In 1989, the U. S. Bureau of Mines conducted additional surface examinations, geochemical sampling, surface magnetometer and radiometric surveys, and a pan concentrate survey in nearby drainages (Burleigh, 1991). Solomon Resources Ltd. staked 3,520 acres on the Sleitat prospect in the summer of 2005. They subsequently worked out a joint venture agreement with Brett Resources, Inc., and geologic and geochemical field work began in Sept. 2005. In 2005, Brett commissioned a extensive report on the deposit by William T. Ellis who analyzed and compiled the previous data on the deposit and did some limited verification sampling.
Age: Early Tertiary. A composite granite stock that hosts most of the greisen sharply crosscuts and thermally metamorphoses mid-Cretaceous clastic sedimentary rocks of the Kuskokwim Group. A K/Ar age of 56.8 +/- 2.8 Ma on muscovite from a late veinlet was reported by Burleigh (1991, p. 6).
Alteration: Greisenization, late clay development, oxidation including iron- and scorodite-staining.
Reserves: Burleigh (1991) estimated that the Sleitat deposit contained a total of 28.6 million tons of ore with an average grade of 0.37 percent tin, 0.04 percent tungsten, and 17 ppm silver. However, Ellis (2006) cautioned that these figures, while not necessarily wrong, do not meet current industry standards for determining mineral resources.

Commodities (Major) - Sn, W; (Minor) - Ag, Bi, Cu, Ta, W
Development Status: None
Deposit Model: Sn greisen deposits (Cox and Singer, 1986; model 15c)

Select Mineral List Type

Standard Detailed Gallery Strunz Chemical Elements

Commodity List

This is a list of exploitable or exploited mineral commodities recorded at this locality.


Mineral List


12 valid minerals.

Detailed Mineral List:

β“˜ Arsenopyrite
Formula: FeAsS
β“˜ Bismite
Formula: Bi2O3
β“˜ Cassiterite
Formula: SnO2
β“˜ Chalcopyrite
Formula: CuFeS2
β“˜ 'Clay minerals'
β“˜ LΓΆllingite
Formula: FeAs2
β“˜ Muscovite
Formula: KAl2(AlSi3O10)(OH)2
β“˜ Pyrite
Formula: FeS2
β“˜ Quartz
Formula: SiO2
β“˜ Sphalerite
Formula: ZnS
β“˜ Stannite
Formula: Cu2FeSnS4
β“˜ Tantalite-(Fe)
Formula: Fe2+Ta2O6
β“˜ Topaz
Formula: Al2(SiO4)(F,OH)2
β“˜ 'Tourmaline'
Formula: AD3G6 (T6O18)(BO3)3X3Z
β“˜ 'Wolframite Group'
β“˜ 'Zinnwaldite'

Gallery:

List of minerals arranged by Strunz 10th Edition classification

Group 2 - Sulphides and Sulfosalts
β“˜Sphalerite2.CB.05aZnS
β“˜Chalcopyrite2.CB.10aCuFeS2
β“˜Stannite2.CB.15aCu2FeSnS4
β“˜Pyrite2.EB.05aFeS2
β“˜LΓΆllingite2.EB.15aFeAs2
β“˜Arsenopyrite2.EB.20FeAsS
Group 4 - Oxides and Hydroxides
β“˜Bismite4.CB.60Bi2O3
β“˜Quartz4.DA.05SiO2
β“˜Cassiterite4.DB.05SnO2
β“˜'Wolframite Group'4.DB.30 va
β“˜Tantalite-(Fe)4.DB.35Fe2+Ta2O6
Group 9 - Silicates
β“˜Topaz9.AF.35Al2(SiO4)(F,OH)2
β“˜Muscovite9.EC.15KAl2(AlSi3O10)(OH)2
Unclassified
β“˜'Clay minerals'-
β“˜'Tourmaline'-AD3G6 (T6O18)(BO3)3X3Z
β“˜'Zinnwaldite'-

List of minerals for each chemical element

HHydrogen
Hβ“˜ MuscoviteKAl2(AlSi3O10)(OH)2
Hβ“˜ TopazAl2(SiO4)(F,OH)2
BBoron
Bβ“˜ TourmalineAD3G6 (T6O18)(BO3)3X3Z
OOxygen
Oβ“˜ BismiteBi2O3
Oβ“˜ CassiteriteSnO2
Oβ“˜ Tantalite-(Fe)Fe2+Ta2O6
Oβ“˜ MuscoviteKAl2(AlSi3O10)(OH)2
Oβ“˜ QuartzSiO2
Oβ“˜ TopazAl2(SiO4)(F,OH)2
Oβ“˜ TourmalineAD3G6 (T6O18)(BO3)3X3Z
FFluorine
Fβ“˜ TopazAl2(SiO4)(F,OH)2
AlAluminium
Alβ“˜ MuscoviteKAl2(AlSi3O10)(OH)2
Alβ“˜ TopazAl2(SiO4)(F,OH)2
SiSilicon
Siβ“˜ MuscoviteKAl2(AlSi3O10)(OH)2
Siβ“˜ QuartzSiO2
Siβ“˜ TopazAl2(SiO4)(F,OH)2
SSulfur
Sβ“˜ ArsenopyriteFeAsS
Sβ“˜ ChalcopyriteCuFeS2
Sβ“˜ PyriteFeS2
Sβ“˜ SphaleriteZnS
Sβ“˜ StanniteCu2FeSnS4
KPotassium
Kβ“˜ MuscoviteKAl2(AlSi3O10)(OH)2
FeIron
Feβ“˜ ArsenopyriteFeAsS
Feβ“˜ ChalcopyriteCuFeS2
Feβ“˜ Tantalite-(Fe)Fe2+Ta2O6
Feβ“˜ LΓΆllingiteFeAs2
Feβ“˜ PyriteFeS2
Feβ“˜ StanniteCu2FeSnS4
CuCopper
Cuβ“˜ ChalcopyriteCuFeS2
Cuβ“˜ StanniteCu2FeSnS4
ZnZinc
Znβ“˜ SphaleriteZnS
AsArsenic
Asβ“˜ ArsenopyriteFeAsS
Asβ“˜ LΓΆllingiteFeAs2
SnTin
Snβ“˜ CassiteriteSnO2
Snβ“˜ StanniteCu2FeSnS4
TaTantalum
Taβ“˜ Tantalite-(Fe)Fe2+Ta2O6
BiBismuth
Biβ“˜ BismiteBi2O3

Other Databases

Link to USGS - Alaska:TA010

Other Regions, Features and Areas containing this locality


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