found: Work cat.: Hart, C.J.R. Mid-Cretaceous magmatic evolution and intrusion-related metallogeny of the Tintina Gold Province, Yukon and Alaska, 2004:abstr. (The Tintina Gold Province comprises numerous (>15) gold belts and districts throughout interior Alaska and Yukon that are associated with Cretaceous plutonic rocks)
found: Lead isotope signatures of Tintina Gold Province intrusions and associated mineral deposits from southeastern Yukon and southwestern Northwest Territories, 2005, via WWW, Mar. 4, 2006:introd. (Tintina Gold Province (TGP) in east-central Alaska, Yukon Territory, and southwestern Northwest Territories)
found: Geology, exploration, and discovery in the Tintina Gold Province, Alaska and Yukon, via WWW, Mar. 4, 2006("The term Tintina Gold Belt was first coined in early 1998 to suggest an area of Central Alaska and the Yukon for which a newly defined and very prospective type of Cretaceous age intrusion-related gold deposit occurred. In the last few years, geologists in British Columbia have noted similar style mineralization extending south from the Yukon territory and questioned whether the Tintina Gold Belt should stop at the Yukon border ... recently the term Tintina Gold Province has replaced Tintina Gold Belt to suggest a collection of numerous individual gold belts and districts throughout central Alaska and Yukon.")
found: Google search, Mar. 3, 2006(Tintina gold province is an arcuate, 1,200-km-long metallogenic province extending from northern British Columbia into southwestern Alaska; The "Tintina gold belt" (referred to henceforth as the Tintina metallogenic province (TMP)), is a 200-km-wide, 1,200-km-long arc, bounded by the Tintina-Kaltag fault systems on the north and the Denali-Fairwell fault systems on the south. This region extends from northern British Columbia westward through east-central Alaska to southwest Alaska; 132 hits on "Tintina Gold Province", 1,010 hits on "Tintina Gold Belt", 89 hits on "Tintina Metallogenic Province")
notfound: Georef thesaurus, via CSA illumina, Mar. 4, 2006