| Deposit ID | 10307448 |
|---|---|
| Record type | Site |
| Current site name | Fort Knox |
| Geographic coordinates: | -147.36195, 64.99168 (WGS84) |
|---|---|
| Relative position | The Fort Knox gold mine is located northeast of Fairbanks on the north flank of Gilmore Dome between Monte Cristo and Melba Creeks. The mine is accessible from the Steese Highway. To reach it, from Cleary Summit, go east on the Fairbanks Creek road; at approximately 2 miles on the Fairbanks Creek road, turn south on the Fort Knox mine road (not shown on the (D-2) NW map) and continue about 3.5 miles to the Fort Knox mill, which is just south of the open pit of the mine. |
Political divisions (FIPS codes)
Fairbanks North Star(Borough)
Alaska(state)
United States(country)
North America(continent)
Land(continent)
USGS map quadrangles
Fairbanks D-1(quadrangle 1:63,360 scale)
Big Delta NW(quadrangle 1:100,000 scale)
Fairbanks(quadrangle 1:250,000 scale)
Hydrologic units (watersheds)
Alaska(hydrologic region)
| Country | State |
|---|---|
| United States | Alaska |
| Commodity | Importance |
|---|---|
| Gold | Primary |
| Materials | Type of material |
|---|---|
| Gold | Ore |
| (1) | -147.36195, 64.99168 |
|---|
| Development status | Producer |
|---|
| District name | Fairbanks |
|---|
| Agency | Database name | Acronym | Record ID | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| USGS | Alaska Resource Data File | ARDF | FB115 |
Chapin, Theodore, 1914, Lode mining near Fairbanks, Alaska: U.S. Geological Survey Bulletin 592-J, p. 321-355.
Swainbank, R.C., Bundtzen, T.K., and Wood, J.E., 1991, Alaska's Mineral Industry 1990: Alaska Division of Geological and Geophysical Surveys Special Report 45, 78 p.
Bakke, Arne, 1992, Geology of the Fort Knox gold deposit, Fairbanks, Alaska [abs.]: Alaska Miners Association Annual Convention, Anchorage, Alaska, November 1992, Abstracts and Papers, 1 p.
Bakke, Arne, 1994, The Fort Knox 'porphyry' gold deposit; structurallly controlled stockwork and shear quartz vein, sulfide-poor mineralization hosted by a Late Cretaceous pluton, east-central Alaska, in Schroeter, T. D., ed., Porphyry deposits of the northwestern Cordillera of North America: Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy, and Petroleum Special Volume 46, p. 795-802.
McCoy, Dan, Newberry, R.J., Layer, Paul, DiMarchi, J.J., Bakke, Arne, Masterman, J.S., and Minehane, D.L., 1997, Plutonic-related gold deposits of interior Alaska, in R.J. Goldfarb, and L.D. Miller, eds., Mineral Deposits of Alaska: Economic Geology Monograph 9, p. 191-241.
Swainbank, R.C., Bundtzen, T. K., Clough A.H., and Henning, M.W., 1997, Alaska's mineral industry 1996: Alaska Division of Geological and Geophysical Surveys Special Report 51, 68 p.
Szumigala, D.J., and Swainbank, R.C., 1999, Alaska's mineral industry 1998: Alaska Division of Geological and Geophysical Surveys Special Report SR 53, 71 p.
Bundtzen, T. K., Swainbank, R. C., Wood, J. E., and Clough, A. H., 1991, Alaska's mineral industry 1991: Alaska Division of Geological and Geophysical Surveys Special Report 46, 89 p.
| Subject category | Comment text |
|---|---|
| Deposit | Model Name = Gold occurs along margins of stockwork quartz veins and veinlets, quartz-filled shear zones, and along fractures within granite; commonly called a Fort Knox type porphyry gold deposit. |
| Type | Date | Name | Affiliation | Comment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Reporter | 31-JUL-01 | J.R. Guidetti Schaefer and C.J. Freeman | Avalon Development Corporation |
Supplemental information added by qvyshift.com. Not part of the original USGS MRDS record.
These are landing pages for further research — the state agencies don't currently expose per-mine deep links.