Shaft Sinking at Rouyn Merger Gold Mine

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
L. J. Cunningham
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
5
File Size:
2809 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1948

Abstract

Introduction The property of Rouyn Merger Gold Mines, Limited, is in Rouyn and Joannès townships, Western Quebec, seven miles east of the town of Rouyn. Traversing it is the east-west trending Cadillac-Bouzan fault. Diamond drilling in 1944 and 1945 along a shear zone south of the fault indicated an ore deposit lying at the contact between sedimentary and volcanic rocks and dipping approximately 60° to the northwest. In the summer of 1945 it was decided to sink a shaft to investigate the indicated ore zone. In the immediate vicinity of the deposit, bed-rock is overlain by clay beds, in some places as much as 70 feet thick. Consequently, possible shaft sites were limited to those locations where overburden would not be excessive. The most favourable site was about 125 feet to the south of the ore zone as projected vertically from bed-rock to the surface. Accordingly, it was decided to sink the shaft at this point, with an inclination of 60° N. W., paralleling the dip of the ore zone.
Citation

APA: L. J. Cunningham  (1948)  Shaft Sinking at Rouyn Merger Gold Mine

MLA: L. J. Cunningham Shaft Sinking at Rouyn Merger Gold Mine. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1948.

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