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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
Montana Geological Society
Abstract
MTGS-AAPG
Montana Geological Society: 1989 Field Conference Guidebook: Montana Centennial Edition: Geologic Resources of Montana: Volume
II, Road Logs
August-September,
ABSTRACT: A Study of the Central Part of the Independence
Mining
District, Park and Sweet Grass Counties, Montana
Independence
mining
district, at the head of the Boulder River in south-central Montana, was the subject of a recent site-specific
mineral
investigation by the U.S. Bureau of Mines. Fieldwork consisted of detailed mapping, magnetic surveys, soil sampling, and rock
sampling
from workings and outcrops. A 3,000- ft by 2,000-ft area containing anomalous gold concentrations was identified as a result
of the study.
The study concentrated on the zoned, polyphase intrusive core of Independence volcano. The Late Cretaceous-age volcano erupted
along
the northwest-trending Cooke City fault zone. Final emplacement of the stock was followed by hydrothermal alteration, including
sericitization, kaolinization, and pyritization, associated with precious and base metal mineralization. Minor pre-1900 production
from
the
mining
district is unrecorded; but, between 1900 and 1940 three mines intermittently produced minor amounts of gold, silver,
and
copper. Ore was mined from steeply-dipping narrow veins which strike northwest in the granodiorite core of the stock. Production
came
primarily from supergene oxide zones reported to be less than 100 ft (30 m) deep.
Mining
attempts were abandoned wherever
unoxidized
material was encountered, and production from the district ceased in 1940.