The Lapa property straddles the Cadillac-Larder Lake Fault Zone, a regional structure that hosts numerous gold prospects and past producers including the historic Lake Shore, Macassa and Kerr Addison gold mines in Kirkland Lake and Larder Lake, Ontario.
On the Lapa property, the Fault Zone is almost entirely taken up by the Archean-age Piché Volcanic Group rocks (mafic to ultramafic schists), and marks the contact between the Cadillac Group (wacke, conglomerate and iron formation) to the north and the Pontiac Group (wacke) to the south. All the rock units dip almost vertically and strike west-northwest. Locally, the Piché Group is folded; many of the gold-mineralized zones are located in the hinges of fold structures. Numerous northeast- and northwest-striking minor faults are interpreted to have later displaced the rock units and mineralization by a couple of metres.
Deposits
Gold mineralization at Lapa is spatially related to zones of deformation within the Piché Group volcanic rocks. Gold is known to occur in three styles: as quartz veins or cylinder-shaped, sulphide-mineralized pods lying on the fold planes; as tabular zones of mineralized quartz veins and veinlets within biotite-altered, sulphide-mineralized volcanics; or as biotite-altered zones associated with sheared feldspathic dykes. The Contact Zone in particular is located at the altered and weakly deformed north contact between the Piché Group and the Cadillac Group sediments.
Mineralization typically presents itself as smoky blue-grey quartz veinlets with very fine sulphide disseminations and occasional fine free gold present in both the quartz and the biotite-sericite-altered deformed volcanic host rock. To date, a potentially economic lens of mineralization making up the Contact Zone has been traced for up to 600 metres, horizontally, and over 1,000 metres, vertically. The zone itself is approximately 3 metres in thickness along its eastern margin but reaches thicknesses of 8 metres along the western portion of the deposit. It is currently open at depth in all directions.