Frobisher's gold on Kodlunarn Island - fact or fable?

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Donald D. Hogarth John Loop W. A. Gibbins
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
4
File Size:
567 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1999

Abstract

"Introduction Background The Frobisher voyages of 1577 and 1578 were organized by the Cathay Company for the express purpose of finding and mining gold ore. Since publication of the Baffm expedition of Charles Francis Hallill, the location of Kodlunarn or Countess of Warwick Island, the headquarters of Frobisher's third (1578) voyage, and focal point of the largest Arctic voyage of all time, has been known to the world. Through Hall we also know the location of the Countess of Warwick Mine on Kodlunarn Island. However, the exact locations of the other mines are not known. Of the ""ore"" we know little. Pieces of the original ""black stone"", once as large as ""a half-penny loaf' have now disappeared altogether. Specimens collected at random from the repository of shipments in England and from loose rock on Kodlunarn Island were termed, respectively, ""hornblende pyroxenite"" and ""amphibolite"" and from a locale about 200 yards from Kodlunarn as (hornblende) ""pyroxenite""121. However, it is uncertain whether these specimens are representative of Kodlunarn or of the other mines, although Blackadar131 notes that, in the northern trench of Kodlunarn, biotite gneiss contains lenses and bands of amphibolite. The ""gold"" itself is even less well defined. It has long been accepted that gold was virtually absent in Frobisher's ore. The ""gold"" has been termed pyrite, biotite and both biotite and pyrite together. Even t h e word "" marquesset"" , which appears and reappears in contemporary descriptions, is nebulous and is defined as ""a stone participating in the nature of some metal, yet in so small quantity, that the metal cannot be melted from it"" (0.E.D., definition of 1616)."
Citation

APA: Donald D. Hogarth John Loop W. A. Gibbins  (1999)  Frobisher's gold on Kodlunarn Island - fact or fable?

MLA: Donald D. Hogarth John Loop W. A. Gibbins Frobisher's gold on Kodlunarn Island - fact or fable?. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1999.

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