A Stock-Taking of the Profession with Special Reference to Exploration

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
W. L. Goodwin
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
10
File Size:
2548 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1926

Abstract

Twenty-five years ago mining engineering in Canada was not a profession. To-day the members of the mining fraternity can fairly claim for 10themselves the professional status. If their pretension is not fully warranted by fact it is not for lack of any technical attainment or service to the public but by reason merely of their neglect to cultivate the cohesion and consciousness that are the outward and visible signs of a professional body. This paper is an attempt, first to sketch briefly the course of the events during the past thirty-five years that have resulted in organizing the mining industry of this country in its present form; then to notice the principal features of the professional organization of this day; and finally to point out that an important part of the work of the mining engineer remains in the state of chaos that characterized the whole of it three or four decades ago, and to suggest a remedy. Thirty years ago there came a great wave of interest in mining in Canada, based principally upon the discovery of gold-quartz and gold-copper throughout wide areas in Nova Scotia, Ontario and British Columbia.
Citation

APA: W. L. Goodwin  (1926)  A Stock-Taking of the Profession with Special Reference to Exploration

MLA: W. L. Goodwin A Stock-Taking of the Profession with Special Reference to Exploration. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1926.

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