A detailed evaluation of structure and alteration related to gold- and silver-rich, base metal-bearing veins was completed at the Skukum property as part of the 2002 mineral exploration program.
The structural setting is an east-trending sinistral strike-slip system bounded by the Berney Creek and Goddell faults to the south and north, respectively. The deposit comprises northeast-trending quartz-sulphide mineral shear veins that formed during syn-tectonic intrusion of rhyolite and andesite dykes related to the Eocene Mount Skukum caldera complex. A genetic relationship between mineralization and certain rhyolite dykes is indicated by patterns of alteration and mineralization. Dilational, northeast-trending structures interconnect and splay off the controlling faults, and host extensional quartz-sulphide mineral veins.
At Skukum Creek the main gold-silver-bearing minerals are electrum and freibergite, which precipitated with late galena-stibnite mineralization, whereas refractory gold in arsenopyrite is the main style at Goddell. A geological model is proposed that facilitates identification of prospective
structures within the property.