Origin of the New Brunswick Gypsum Deposits (7eb71f6c-dc28-444e-a17a-1cefacd5a405)

- Organization:
- Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
- Pages:
- 2
- File Size:
- 887 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1960
Abstract
"THE November issue of the Bulletin carried in it ""Origin of the New Bruns1viclc Gypsum Deposits"" by J. Olaf Sund. This paper was a digested account of a Master's thesis at the University of New Brunswick which was a very useful compendium of information of gyp-sum in New Brunswick. It was a warded the President' s Gold .Medal and the First Prize in the Graduates' Section of the Students' Essay Competition. The present writer presents his congratulations to the winner of the competition. At the same time he must comment on the use of certain terms and on certain conclusions presented in the paper.The term ""unconformable"" has been used in several places in the paper to describe the relationship of gypsum to anhydrite in various deposits in New Brunswick in a sense which is quite alien to the accepted meaning. It has long been known tl1at the gypsum at the surface or near the surface in deposits in the Atlantic Provinces has come from hydration of anhydrite by surface and ground waters. The gyp-sum must be looked upon then as an alteration or even a weathering product. It cannot in this sense be called ""unconformable"" and thus arguments using the word in the accepted sense are invalid."
Citation
APA:
(1960) Origin of the New Brunswick Gypsum Deposits (7eb71f6c-dc28-444e-a17a-1cefacd5a405)MLA: Origin of the New Brunswick Gypsum Deposits (7eb71f6c-dc28-444e-a17a-1cefacd5a405). Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1960.