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Owhat Prospect (Cobalt Creek), Aniak Mining District, Bethel Census Area, Alaska, USAi
Regional Level Types
Owhat Prospect (Cobalt Creek)Prospect
Aniak Mining DistrictMining District
Bethel Census AreaCensus Area
AlaskaState
USACountry

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Latitude & Longitude (WGS84):
61° 39' 46'' North , 159° 6' 28'' West
Latitude & Longitude (decimal):
Köppen climate type:
Nearest Settlements:
PlacePopulationDistance
Chuathbaluk125(2017)12.4km
Aniak528(2017)23.8km
Mindat Locality ID:
199294
Long-form identifier:
mindat:1:2:199294:9
GUID (UUID V4):
0


Location: The Owhat prospect is in the Russian Mountains in the cirque valley at the head of Cobalt Creek. The map site is at the approximate center of sec. 8, T. 18 N., R. 54 W., of the Seward Meridian. This is locality 6 of Hoare and Cobb (1972, 1977), and sample locality 13 of Bundtzen and Laird (1991).
Geology: The Owhat, or Cobalt Creek prospect was discovered by Native prospectors before 1900 (Maddren, 1915; Holzheimer, 1926). The deposits include 8 to 10 sulfide-tourmaline-axinite-quartz veins or greisens in syeno-monzonite (Bundtzen and Laird, 1991). The individual greisens are several inches to more than 3 feet thick in a zone that is 5 to 26 feet thick; the average width of the zone is about 8 feet,and it has been traced more than 280 feet vertically. The greisens trend northwest and dip steeply northeast near a contact with an axinite-bearing andesite porphyry dike. The mineralized zone has been traced on the surface for a distance of 870 feet, and extensions totaling 650 feet in both directions are indicated by the distribution of mineralized float. The deposit is mineralogically complex and includes arsenopyrite, aramayoite, bismuth, bismuthite, bornite, chalcopyrite, galena, gold, marcasite, pekoite or gladite, pyrite, sphalerite, stephanite, stetefeldite and tetrahedrite in the sulfide-rich material in the quartz-tourmaline-axinite greisen. Multiple episodes of mineralization are indicated by cross-cutting relations among the veins. Late-forming minerals include arsenopyrite, chalcopyrite, and pyrite, but the youngest cross-cutting assemblages include bornite, stephanite, tetrahedrite, sphalerite, and lead-bismuth sulfides (Bundtzen and Laird, 1991). Microprobe analyses indicate that arsenopyrite contains 0.1 to 0.2 weight percent gold in lattice structures. Bundtzen and Laird (1991) collected 16 chip-channel samples averaging 4.4 feet wide, along 860 feet of the greisen zone. The samples average 5.3 ppm gold, 13.4 percent arsenic, 0.21 percent antimony, 0.39 percent copper, 0.07 percent tin, 0.05 percent zinc, and 0.017 percent cobalt. Assuming dimensions, in feet, of 4.4 x 280 x 870, Bundtzen and Laird (1991) estimated that the resource at this prospect is 63,000 tons of material with the stated average grades. The syeno-monzonite host rocks are part of the Upper Cretaceous intrusive complex of the Russian Mountains (Bundtzen and Laird, 1991).
Workings: Three shallow shafts as much as 40 feet deep and several surface trenches and pits explore about 800 feet of strike length of this deposit.
Age: Late Cretaceous or Tertiary. Veins crosscut part of the intrusive complex of the Russian Mountains. Quartz monzonite from this complex has yielded a K/Ar age of 70.3 +/- 2.1 Ma (Bundtzen and Laird, 1991).
Alteration: Silicification and tourmalinization.
Reserves: Assuming dimensions, in feet, of 4.4 x 280 x 870, Bundtzen and Laird (1991) estimate that the resource at this prospect is 63,000 tons of material with average grades of 5.3 ppm gold, 13.4 percent arsenic, 0.21 percent antimony, 0.39 percent copper, 0.07 percent tin, 0.05 percent zinc, and 0.017 percent cobalt.

Commodities (Major) - Au, Cu, Sb, Sn; (Minor) - Ag, Bi, Co, Pb, Zn
Development Status: None
Deposit Model: Polymetallic veins (Cox and Singer, 1986; model 22c)

Select Mineral List Type

StandardDetailedGalleryStrunzChemical Elements

Detailed Mineral List:

Aramayoite
Formula:Ag3Sb2(Bi,Sb)S6
Arsenopyrite
Formula:FeAsS
'Axinite Group'
Bismuth
Formula:Bi
Bismutite
Formula:(BiO)2CO3
Bornite
Formula:Cu5FeS4
Chalcopyrite
Formula:CuFeS2
Galena
Formula:PbS
Gold
Formula:Au
Marcasite
Formula:FeS2
Pyrite
Formula:FeS2
Quartz
Formula:SiO2
Sphalerite
Formula:ZnS
Stephanite
Formula:Ag5SbS4
'Tetrahedrite Subgroup'
Formula:Cu6(Cu4C2+2)Sb4S12S
'Tourmaline'
Formula:AD3G6 (T6O18)(BO3)3X3Z

Gallery:

List of minerals arranged by Strunz 10th Edition classification

Group 1 - Elements
Gold1.AA.05Au
Bismuth1.CA.05Bi
Group 2 - Sulphides and Sulfosalts
Bornite2.BA.15Cu5FeS4
Sphalerite2.CB.05aZnS
Chalcopyrite2.CB.10aCuFeS2
Galena2.CD.10PbS
Pyrite2.EB.05aFeS2
Marcasite2.EB.10aFeS2
Arsenopyrite2.EB.20FeAsS
'Tetrahedrite Subgroup'2.GB.05Cu6(Cu4C2+2)Sb4S12S
Stephanite2.GB.10Ag5SbS4
Aramayoite2.HA.25Ag3Sb2(Bi,Sb)S6
Group 4 - Oxides and Hydroxides
Quartz4.DA.05SiO2
Group 5 - Nitrates and Carbonates
Bismutite5.BE.25(BiO)2CO3
Unclassified
'Tourmaline'-AD3G6 (T6O18)(BO3)3X3Z
'Axinite Group'-

List of minerals for each chemical element

BBoron
BTourmalineAD3G6 (T6O18)(BO3)3X3Z
CCarbon
CBismutite(BiO)2CO3
OOxygen
OBismutite(BiO)2CO3
OQuartzSiO2
OTourmalineAD3G6 (T6O18)(BO3)3X3Z
SiSilicon
SiQuartzSiO2
SSulfur
SArsenopyriteFeAsS
SAramayoiteAg3Sb2(Bi,Sb)S6
SBorniteCu5FeS4
SChalcopyriteCuFeS2
SGalenaPbS
SMarcasiteFeS2
SPyriteFeS2
SSphaleriteZnS
SStephaniteAg5SbS4
STetrahedrite SubgroupCu6(Cu4C22+)Sb4S12S
FeIron
FeArsenopyriteFeAsS
FeBorniteCu5FeS4
FeChalcopyriteCuFeS2
FeMarcasiteFeS2
FePyriteFeS2
CuCopper
CuBorniteCu5FeS4
CuChalcopyriteCuFeS2
CuTetrahedrite SubgroupCu6(Cu4C22+)Sb4S12S
ZnZinc
ZnSphaleriteZnS
AsArsenic
AsArsenopyriteFeAsS
AgSilver
AgAramayoiteAg3Sb2(Bi,Sb)S6
AgStephaniteAg5SbS4
SbAntimony
SbAramayoiteAg3Sb2(Bi,Sb)S6
SbStephaniteAg5SbS4
SbTetrahedrite SubgroupCu6(Cu4C22+)Sb4S12S
AuGold
AuGoldAu
PbLead
PbGalenaPbS
BiBismuth
BiAramayoiteAg3Sb2(Bi,Sb)S6
BiBismuthBi
BiBismutite(BiO)2CO3

Other Databases

Link to USGS - Alaska:RM016

Other Regions, Features and Areas containing this locality

North AmericaContinent
North America PlateTectonic Plate

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