| Deposit ID | 10307501 |
|---|---|
| Record type | Site |
| Current site name | Healy Creek |
| Geographic coordinates: | -148.70287, 63.87962 (WGS84) |
|---|---|
| Relative position | Healy Creek is a tributary to the Nenana River. The creek has been placer mined for about 8 miles from the mouth of Healy Creek upstream nearly to the junction of Coal Creek. The map site is near the upper end of the workings, in the NE1/4 of sec. 15, T. 12 S., R. 6 W., of the Fairbanks Meridian. |
Political divisions (FIPS codes)
Denali(Borough)
Alaska(state)
United States(country)
North America(continent)
Land(continent)
USGS map quadrangles
Healy D-4(quadrangle 1:63,360 scale)
Healy N(quadrangle 1:100,000 scale)
Healy C(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 |
| Model code | 119 |
|---|---|
| USGS model code | 39a |
| Deposit model name | Placer Au-PGE |
| Mark3 model number | 54 |
| (1) | -148.70287, 63.87962 |
|---|
| Development status | Past Producer |
|---|
| District name | Bonnifield |
|---|
| Agency | Database name | Acronym | Record ID | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| USGS | Alaska Resource Data File | ARDF | HE011 |
Cobb, E.H., 1978, Summary of references to mineral occurrences (other than mineral fuels and construction materials) in the Healy quadrangle, Alaska: U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 78-1062, 113 p.
Clark, A.L., and Cobb, E.H., 1972, Metallic mineral resources map of the Healy quadrangle, Alaska: U.S. Geological Survey Miscellaneous Field Studies Map MF-394, 1 sheet, scale 1:250,000.
| Subject category | Comment text |
|---|---|
| Deposit | Model Name = Placer Au (Cox and Singer, 1986; model 39a) |
| Type | Date | Name | Affiliation | Comment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Reporter | 07-APR-00 | N. Van Wyck | Stevens Exploration Management 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.