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  • CIM
    Brisco Barite Mine

    By G. R. MANSON

    The Brisco Barite Mine lies 70 km south-southeast of Golden, British Columbia. Barile mineralization occurs in a northstriking brecciation zone within Ordovician-Silurian Beaver/ oot dolomites and qua

    Jan 1, 1984

  • CIM
    New Brunswick potash deposits

    By T. C. WEBB

    In New Brunswick, significant potash deposits are intimately associated with rocks of the Lower Carboniferous Windsor Group. To date, two deposits high in sylvinite, up to 20 m thick, have been confir

    Jan 1, 1984

  • CIM
    The pyrophyllite deposit on the Avalon Peninsula, Newfoundland

    By V. S. Papezik

    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 dep

    Jan 1, 1984

  • CIM
    Fluorite in British Columbia

    By Z. D. Hora

    The major fluorite producer in British Columbia was the Rock Candy Mine, inactive since 1942. Other deposits of economic interest include the Rexspar deposit, in which fluorite is associated with uran

    Jan 1, 1984

  • CIM
    High-swelling bentonite deposits in southwest Saskatchewan

    By M. J. MONEA

    Canada's only economic high-swelling bentonite deposit is mined in Wilcox, Saskatchewan, by A vonlea Mineral Industries Limited. The bentonite resulted from devitrified and altered volcanic ash releas

    Jan 1, 1984

  • CIM
    Summary of industrial minerals in Nova Scotia

    By John H. Fowler

    Nova Scotia has been mining and exporting industrial minerals for over two hundred years. As an industrial mineral producer, this province continues to rank as the number one gypsum mining and exporti

    Jan 1, 1984

  • CIM
    Gypsum in Atlantic Canada

    By J. R. CAMERON

    Gypsum is mined in all Atlantic Provinces except Prince Edward Island. It is generally thought to have been derived from the hydration of anhydrite in areas of minimal drainage. Late Devonian downwarp

    Jan 1, 1984

  • CIM
    Cement in Canada

    By D. H. Stonehouse

    Of the f ive Canadian cement producing regions- Atlantic, Quebec, Ontario, Prairie and Pacific-Ontario has the greatest capacity and normally produces the most cement. However, during the last 5 years

    Jan 1, 1984

  • CIM
    Magnesite in British Columbia

    By Z. D. Hora

    Several deposits of crystalline magnesite are known in southeast British Columbia. Deposits at Cross River and Marysville have been thoroughly explored, but as yet there has been no commercial product

    Jan 1, 1984

  • CIM
    Gypsum in Manitoba*

    By BARRY BANNATYNE

    Gypsum in Manitoba is quarried from the Jurassic Amaranth Formation a1 Gypsumville and Harcus; it has been mined near Amaranth and Silver Plains. At Gypsumville, gypsum is carbonate- free but has thin

    Jan 1, 1984

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

    By Donald J. MacNeil

    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 Precam

    Jan 1, 1984

  • CIM
    Clay and shale in British Columbia

    By Z. D. Hora

    Brick shales and refractory clays are mined at Sumas Mountain near Abbotsford. Sholes and stoneware clays elsewhere in the province have not been developed. THE SUMAS MOUNTAIN deposit near Abbotsford,

    Jan 1, 1984

  • CIM
    Badgeley Island quartzite deposit

    By D. MacGREGOR, VERA TUREK

    The Badgeley Island quartzite deposir in Georgian Bay is worked by lndusmin Limired and was developed in 1969 to produce a high-qualiry silica for use in rhe ferrosilicon and glass industries. The qua

    Jan 1, 1984

  • CIM
    The Perth calcite operation of Steep Rock Resources Inc.

    By G. E. Wood

    Steep Rock Resources Inc. owns a calcite quarry property at Tatlock, Ontario, and a calcite processing plant at Perth, Ontario. The Tatlock marble deposit forms part of an extensive series of carbonat

    Jan 1, 1984

  • CIM
    St. Donat quartzite

    By DALE MacGREGOR, VERA TUREK

    lndusmin Limited acquired the St. Donat quartzite deposit in 1967 to produce high-quality silica for use in the sandblasting and silicon carbide industries. The quartzite, of Grenville age, is highly

    Jan 1, 1984

  • CIM
    Geology of the Clinton Creek asbestos deposit of Cassiar Resources Limited

    By D. R. BUDINSKI

    Clinton Creek Mine in west-central Yukon produced 0.94 million tonnes of fibre from 15 million tonnes of asbestos ore between 1968 and 1978. The mine closed in 1978. The deposit lies along the margin

    Jan 1, 1984

  • CIM
    The Chipewyan Red Granitea building stone prospect

    By John D. Godfrey

    Precambrian Shield rocks, exposed in the extreme northeast corner of Alberta, provide the only possibility for a granitic building stone development in the province. Among a wide variety of granitoid

    Jan 1, 1984

  • CIM
    Ceramic clays of the Cypress Hills

    By LUKE O. LINDOE

    A major clay products industry in the Medicine Hat area since before 1910 has maintained a continued interest in the clays of the Cypress Hills. For the first forty years the materials used were local

    Jan 1, 1984

  • CIM
    Production methods within the sphagnum peat moss industry in Canada

    By JOHN DUNFIELD

    Good quality sphagnum peat bogs occur across Canada in areas of ample rainfall and cool, temperate climates. Early peat production techniques were restricted primarily to hand digging blocks of peat a

    Jan 1, 1984

  • CIM
    L'industrie de la pierre de taille au Quebec: aspects geologiques des exploitations de granite (Dimension stone of Quebec: geological aspects of commercial granite deposits)

    By Suzie Nantel

    Crystalline igneous rocks, known commercially as granite, are exploited in Quebec f rom more than twenty-five quarries for building, ornamental and monumental purpose$. Quebec is the main Canadian pro

    Jan 1, 1984