119 Glacier Creek Mining Company, Limited (Locality 76) Reference: Annual Report of the Minister of Mines, British Columbia, 1910, 1924, and 1925; Geol. Surv., Canada, Memoirs 32 and 159. The holdings of the Glacier Creek Mining Company, Limited, lie between the George E claim on the north and.the Little Wonder claim on the south. The ground is traversed by the Portland Canal fissure zone. The country rock consists of argillite of the lower part of the Hazelton group, striking north and dipping west at moderate angles. A crosscut adit, 625 feet long, crosscuts four parallel quartz veins that strike north, and dip 45 to 70 degrees west. The first vein cut by the adit is 1 to 2 feet wide, the second is 3 feet wide, and the fourth is 4 to 20 feet wide. The third vein is 2 feet wide and is perhaps a branch of the fourth. Glacier Girl Group (Locality 99) Reference: Annual Report of the Minister of Mines, British Columbia, 1928 and 1929. The Glacier Girl group of eight claims is on the east end of the ridge between the two glaciers of Marmot river. A large, rusty area contains pyrrhotite and silver values. Two fracture zones up to 5 feet wide have been developed by open-cuts and carry locally 20 ounces of silver a ton. Gold Bar No. 1 Claim (Locality 59) Reference: Geol. Surv., Canada, Memoir 32. The Gold Bar No. 1 claim is south of Bitter creek a mile above its mouth. The claim is at the southern boundary of the belt of dykes. A quartz vein up to 10 feet wide is reported to carry gold. Goldie Group (Locality 67) Reference: Annual Report of the Minister of Mines, British Columbia, 1925 and 1926. The Goldie group of claims is above the Emperor group between Glacier and Bitter creeks. Narrow, galena-bearing quartz veins cut argillites and dykes. One small shoot of galena was mined. The total of eighteen sacks of ore ran 80 per cent lead, and contained 85 ounces of silver a ton. Gold Ore Mining Company, Limited (Locality 92) Reference: Annual Report of the Minister of Mines, British Columbia, 1925. The Gold Ore Mining Company, Limited, was organized in 1925 to develop the Eagle group of claims which adjoin the Silverado on the north and lie east of the mouth of Bear river. Two quartz veins in volcanic rocks are up to 9 feet wide and are sparingly mineralized with pyrrhotite and galena.