Vinasale

The Vinasale is a silver and gold mine located in Alaska.

About the MRDS Data:

All mine locations were obtained from the USGS Mineral Resources Data System. The locations and other information in this database have not been verified for accuracy. It should be assumed that all mines are on private property.

Mine Info

Name: Vinasale  

State:  Alaska

County:  na

Elevation:

Commodity: Silver, Gold

Lat, Long: 62.71, -155.69000

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Satelite image of the Vinasale

Vinasale MRDS details

Site Name

Primary: Vinasale


Commodity

Primary: Silver
Primary: Gold
Secondary: Molybdenum
Secondary: Zinc
Secondary: Lead
Secondary: Antimony
Secondary: Arsenic
Secondary: Bismuth


Location

State: Alaska
District: McGrath


Land Status

Not available


Holdings

Not available


Workings

Not available


Ownership

Not available


Production

Not available


Deposit

Record Type: Site
Operation Category: Prospect
Operation Type: Unknown
Years of Production:
Organization:
Significant:


Physiography

Not available


Mineral Deposit Model

Model Name: Porphyry Cu-Au


Orebody

Not available


Structure

Not available


Alterations

Alteration Type: L
Alteration Text: Silicification and dolomitic, sericitic, and propylitic.


Rocks

Not available


Analytical Data

Not available


Materials

Ore: Arsenopyrite
Ore: Galena
Ore: Jamesonite
Ore: Pyrargyrite
Ore: Pyrite
Ore: Sphalerite
Ore: Stibnite
Ore: Silver
Gangue: Dolomite
Gangue: Epidote
Gangue: Quartz
Gangue: Sericite
Gangue: Tourmaline


Comments

Comment (Workings): Workings / Exploration = Bundtzen (1986) first described the mineralized Vinasale pluton and associated gold-scheelite-bismuth vein mineralization on the south flank of Vinasale Mountain, and suggested that the lode mineralization was the source of placer gold mined in Alder Gulch. During 1990, Placer Dome U.S. Inc. and operator Central Alaska Gold Mining Company discovered significant gold anomalies in soils in the Central, Northeast, and South Zones, and initiated a diamond drill program, concentrating on the Central Zone (DiMarchi, 1993). By the end of 1991, a 5,182 m diamond drill program indicated that 11,566,000 tonnes of ore contained about 31,100 kg (1 million ounces) gold (Bundtzen and others, 1992). With additional work completed in 1992 and 1993, a revised resource estimate for the Vinasale deposit, based on a total of 11,260 m of subsurface drilling, is 10.3 million tonnes grading 2.4 g/tonne gold for a total in-place reserve of 24,540 kg (789,000 ounces) gold (J. DiMarchi, written communication, 1994; Bundtzen and Miller, 1997). An additional 6,562 kg (211,000 ounces) gold is regarded as an in-place resource.

Comment (Exploration): Status = Inactive

Comment (Geology): Geologic Description = Vinasale Mountain is underlain by a composite intrusive complex of Late Cretaceous age (Bundtzen, 1986; DiMarchi, 1993). The intrusive suite includes peraluminous, porphyritic quartz monzonite, rhyolite porphyry, shonkinite, and monzonite breccia. The intrusive phases cut and thermally alter clastic rocks of the early Late Cretaceous, Kuskokwim Group flysch (Bundtzen and Miller, 1997). The stock has yielded a K-Ar age of 69 Ma (Solie and others, 1991). Much of the following is based on work summarized by DiMarchi (1993) and Bundtzen and Miller (1997). . During industry exploration work conducted from 1989 to 1991, (DiMarchi, 1993), large areas of coincident multi-element (Au, As, Sb, Pb, Mo) soil anomalies were found in three distinct zones named the Central, Northeast, and South zones surrounding the summit of Vinasale Mountain. The Central zone is approximately 457m by 610 m in area and contains maximum values in soil of 2,470 ppb Au. The Northeast and South Zones were similar in total area but contained weaker maximum soil anomalies of 185 ppb Au and 335 ppb Au respectively. The soil anomalies led to the subsurface exploration work that discovered significant Au-polymetallic mineralization. Silicification occurs in veins, segregations and silica flooded zones, and is frequently accompanied by sulfides. Sericite alteration in the Central Zone is characterized by progressive replacement of biotite and plagioclase by sericite and dolomite, and of K-feldspar by sericite, quartz, and dolomite. Propylitic alteration forms a broad halo around zones containing silica and sericite alteration, and is characterized by replacement of biotite by chlorite, and plagioclase by epidote, chlorite, and calcite. . Sulfide mineralization in the Central Zone consists of disseminated pyrite and arsenopyrite in areas of silica flooding in quartz monzonite, sericitic alteration in monzonite breccias, and quartz-dolomite veins and segregations in all intrusive lithologies. Subordinate veinlets and veins host coarse-grained pyrite, galena, arsenopyrite, sphalerite, stibnite, and jamesonite, and microscopic native silver and very minor gold. Practically all of the gold values appear to be concentrated in lattice structures of arsenopyrite, pyrite, and other sulfide minerals. The Northeast and South Zones contain similar but weaker manifestations of Au-polymetallic mineralization than that displayed in the Central Zone. The two longest drill intercepts from the Central Zone contain 63.1 m of 2.42 grams/tonne gold and 71.9 m containing 2.27 grams/tonne gold. The Central Zone is enriched in antimony (average=338 ppm), zinc (average=108 ppm), lead (average=75 ppm), bismuth (3 ppm), and silver (average=0.7 ppm). The gold/silver ratio averages about 2:1 in mineralized samples. Arsenic is most concentrated in the southern Central Zone where it averages 0.80 percent. High barium (average=500 ppm) occurs in the Northeast Zone. . Based on 11,260 m of diamond drilling, the Vinasale Deposit is estimated to contain 10.3 million tonnes grading 2.40 g/tonne gold or about 24,540 kg (789,000 ounces) gold (Bundtzen and Miller, 1997).

Comment (Deposit): Model Name = Porphyry gold-polymetallic stockwork (Cox and Singer, 1986; model 20c).

Comment (Deposit): Other Comments = Classified as a peraluminous granite porphyry-hosted gold-polymetallic deposit, an important deposit type in the Kuskokwim Mineral Belt (Bundtzen and Miller, 1997).

Comment (Reference): Primary Reference = DiMarchi, 1993

Comment (Reserve-Resource): Reserves = Drill-indicated gold resources are 24,540 kg (789,000 ounces); an additional 6,562 kg (211,000 ounces) gold in an inferred resource category. Byproduct metal content (Ag, Bi) has not been determined.

Comment (Geology): Age = 68.0 Ma from sericite and 69.0 Ma from apatite, both from Central Zone mineralization.


References

Reference (Deposit): DiMarchi, J.J., 1993, Geology, alteration, and mineralization of the Vinasale Mountain gold deposit, west-central Alaska: Alaska Division of Geological and Geophysical Surveys Professional Report 113, p. 17-29.

Reference (Deposit): Solie, D.N., Bundtzen, T.K., and Gilbert, W.G., 1991, K-Ar ages of igneous rocks in the McGrath quadrangle, Alaska: Alaska Division of Geological and Geophysical Surveys Public Data File Report 160, 17 pages, one sheet, 1:250,000 scale.

Reference (Deposit): Bundtzen, T.K., 1986, Prospect examination of a gold-tungsten placer deposit in Alder Creek, Vinasale Mountain area, western Alaska: Alaska Division of Geological and Geophysical Surveys Public Data File Report 86-15, 10 pages.

Reference (Deposit): Bundtzen, T.K., Swainbank, R.C., Wood, J.E., Clough, A.H., 1991 (1992), Alaska's Mineral Industry 1991: Alaska Division of Geological & Geophysical Surveys, Special Report 46, 89 p.

Reference (Deposit): Bundtzen, T.K., and Miller, M.L., 1997, Precious metals associated with Late Cretaceous-early Tertiary igneous rocks of southwestern Alaska, in Goldfarb, R.J., and Miller, L.D., eds., Economic Geology Monograph #9, Mineral Deposits of Alaska, p. 242-286.

Reference (Deposit): McCoy, Dan, Newberry, R.J., Layer, Paul, DiMarchi, J.J., Bakke, Arne, Masterman, J.S., and Minehane, D.L., 1997, Plutonic-related gold deposits of interior Alaska, in R.J. Goldfarb, and L.D. Miller, eds., Mineral Deposits of Alaska: Economic Geology Monograph 9, p. 191-241.


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