The pyrophyllite deposit on the Avalon Peninsula, Newfoundland

- Organization:
- Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
- Pages:
- 3
- File Size:
- 3013 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1984
Abstract
Pyrophyllite, a hydrous aluminium silicate, is used mainly in
the ceramic industry and to a lesser extent as a filler in the
manufacture of paper, rubber, insecticides and baby powders.
Commercial deposits of pyrophyllite in North America are
restricted to the "Avalon Zone" , a belt of late Precambrian
volcanic and sedimentary rocks that extends along the eastern
flank of the Appalachian orogenic belt f rom Georgia to Newfoundland.
The only commercial Canadian pyrophyllite deposit lies
near Foxtrap on the A valon Peninsula of Newfoundland.
Here, steeply dipping lenses of altered pyrophyllite rock occur
in a north-trending rhyolite belt near the contact with a
granitoid pluton. The altered rock is massive, light greenishyellow
and contains varying proportions of pyrophyllite,
sericite and quartz with lesser amounts of diaspore and traces
of barite and rutile. A lteration was produced by acid solutions,
either derived from or activated by the intruding pluton,
at temperatures of 250° to 270°C and pressures not exceeding
2 kbr. The largest of the Foxtrap pyrophyllite lenses,
discovered in 1897, was mined intermittently f rom 1903 until
the early 1950s. The present owner of the mine, Newfoundland
Minerals Limited, acquired the property in 1959 and ships between
27, 000 and 36,000 tonnes annually to th e company plant
in Lansdale, Pennsylvania, for use in ceramic tile.
Citation
APA:
(1984) The pyrophyllite deposit on the Avalon Peninsula, NewfoundlandMLA: The pyrophyllite deposit on the Avalon Peninsula, Newfoundland. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1984.