Post by
Wangotango67 on Mar 06, 2021 2:45am
SKEAD + BONANZA + SCADDING - MAP ( supporting hypothesis )
PAGE - 9
https://www.geologyontario.mndm.gov.on.ca/mndmfiles/afri/data/imaging/41I10NE2029/41I10NE2029.pdf
Here we can see the Skead tenures which Bonanza are now apart of.
Wanapatei Lake has 2 bays.
- Massry extreme westerly
- Outlet Bay - Easterly
I took one look at the Wanapatei Lake - specifically Massey Bay + Outlet Bay,
Then factored in the light pink zone where Bonanza is... then asked...
" How could the mineralization from Bonanza carry over into Scadding ? "
Then it doned on me...
I said of course... the Wanapatei Lake may have annually flooded, and both Bay's,
may have contributed to this region being flooded and the overspill could have
easily create rushing waters carrying in foriegn ores into - SCAD.
Thus the specific ores - gold, gabbro, breccia jagged + angular ores -along with Jognston's
soda occurence - surficially redistributed on the Scad tenures...
Those two sidewalls from the Bonanza massive vien... 1800 ft x 60ft long.
Have an exact match to Scadding's surfical ores.
The iron at scad is resident.
While the. gold, breccia, gabbro, carbonate quartz, are foreign intrusion. ( topical )
My best guess.
Hence - gold and iron may not be the corrective recipe - rather- foriegn ores from Bonanza region intruded - along with soda carbonates - erroding the rons - which may giver reason how the irons picked up the foriegn gold and iron reforming a secondary iron ore consolodation - seen in
black oxides vs true brown iron ores.
So.. if this theory is correct...
Then... westerly would be good target zones.
Gold might be topically distributed form 15 m at fepth and deeper from Bonanza to Scad.
Along with... checking all westerly and northern tips of red anomalies ( iron zones ) facing the Bonanza tenures - seeing if gold was blocked - by raised iron ore mounds - creating beds of
concentrated gold along the westerly red iron anomalies.
.
Cheers...
Hey... i actually like my own assement...( tease )
Done with the research... ugh...