Geology of limestone and dolomite deposits Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Donald J. MacNeil
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
4
File Size:
3352 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1984

Abstract

The commercial carbonate industry of Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia, began about eighty years ago with the opening of the Sydney steel plant. Significant carbonate deposits are confined to the Precambrian George River Grav" and the Mississippian Windsor Group. George River Group carbonates are thought to have formed as part of a stable platformal sequence. They are crystalline and lie within a dominantly quartzitic sequence. Of the four major sites for George River carbonates on the island, the most commercially promising are the dolomite at Kelly Cove and the limestone and dolomite at Glencoe. Kelly Cove dolomite has good potential for metallurgical, agricultural and fettling purposes; reserves approach 13.6 million tonnes. Windsor Group carbonates were deposited as marine sediments in basins formed by pre-Carboniferous fault blocks. Windsor dolomite reserves at Stoney Creek are only fractionally retrievable and hence are of little economic value. The Windsor Group's Irish Cove limestone has been quarried on a large scale since 1964; no undeveloped commercial deposits, however, remain in the group.
Citation

APA: Donald J. MacNeil  (1984)  Geology of limestone and dolomite deposits Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia

MLA: Donald J. MacNeil Geology of limestone and dolomite deposits Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1984.

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