Ceramic clays of the Cypress Hills

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
LUKE O. LINDOE
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
5
File Size:
5127 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1984

Abstract

A major clay products industry in the Medicine Hat area since before 1910 has maintained a continued interest in the clays of the Cypress Hills. For the first forty years the materials used were local red-burning Cretaceous and Pleistocene clays and sands and high-quality stoneware clays of the Whitemud Formation at Eastend, Saskatchewan. Recently a much broader spectrum of raw materials has been brought into use. Including the exposures of the Eagle Butte structure, the Cypress Hills present a 1200 m section of clay-like sediments. Of this 1200 m about 94 per cent, the high montmorillonite shales of the Upper Cretaceous, can be considered useless, or nearly so; the remaining six per cent, all fresh-water beds, presents a wide variety of potentially useful materials. The development of these clay resources is complicated by deep surface creep on the south flank of the Cypress Hills, by largescale slumping on the north flank and by a structural complex in the Eagle Butte area.
Citation

APA: LUKE O. LINDOE  (1984)  Ceramic clays of the Cypress Hills

MLA: LUKE O. LINDOE Ceramic clays of the Cypress Hills. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1984.

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