Mineral Exploration

Winter 2014

Mineral Exploration is the official publication of the Association of Mineral Exploration British Columbia.

Issue link: http://digital.canadawide.com/i/428696

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(from far left to right) The Hazelton and Telkwa area, 1915; Pacific Western Airlines Junkers W 34 floatplane piloted by Doug Chappel bringing supplies; prospecting on Brian Boru Peak of the Rocher Déboulé Range, 1955; group shot: posing at a prospecting camp. One or both may produce copper and other metals again. As it turned out, the big mines (except for Granisle on Babine Lake) eluded the first prospectors, although there was a large molybdenum deposit almost beneath their feet. Nearly all the mineral showings they were working on around Hudson Bay Mountain, including the Duthie mine, were part of a single min- eralizing system centred on what is now known as the Davidson deposit, most of which is hidden within the mountain. It was not until the early 1960s, when molyb- denum occurrences on the mountain attracted the attention of Stew Wallace (Climax Molybdenum Company) and work continued on key claims optioned from local prospectors Bill Yorke-Hardy, Eddie Malkow, Hunter Simpson and Russ McFarland, that the significance of the deposit was recognized and the geological picture started falling into place. A major molybdenum resource has now been out- lined at the Davidson deposit, only about eight kilometres northwest of the town of Smithers. ❏ Photographs : Government of British Columbia W I N T E R 2 0 1 4 103

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