The Helen Mine and Beneficiating Plant

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
C. D. Kaeding
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
10
File Size:
3798 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1940

Abstract

IN the summer of 1937, the Algoma Steel Corporation, Limited, decided to embark on the full-scale development o their Helen mine and the erection of plants to produce commercial iron sinter from its ores at a rate ? of fifteen hundred tons per day. The Helen deposit has long been known as one of the largest bodies of non-commercial iron ore in Canada, consisting almost entirely of siderite with a band of pyrite along the north wall and some lenticular inclusions of pyrite throughout the mass. It originally contained a nominal amount of hematite (2,800,000 tons), localized at the western end of the ore-body, but this was mined out during the years 1900 to 1918. For details of the:-geology of the Helen range and of the surrounding district, the reader is referred to Memoir 147, Michipicoten Iron Ranges, Geological Survey of Canada, 1926 (1). The siderite mass was explored by diamond drilling in 1917 and the portion so drilled was estimated to contain 67 million tons of siderite averaging 36.0 per cent Fe, 3.2 per cent S, and 8.2 per cent SiO,, without establishing its ultimate depth or extent. The variation in the sulphur content shown by drilling was from 1.5 per cent in 72 per cent of the tonnage, to 7.2 percent in the remaining 28 percent. The pyritic ore aver-aged about 38 percent iron, but otherwise its composition was substantially the same as that of the siderite mass.
Citation

APA: C. D. Kaeding  (1940)  The Helen Mine and Beneficiating Plant

MLA: C. D. Kaeding The Helen Mine and Beneficiating Plant. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1940.

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