Defining the Mineral Zones of Northern British Columbia

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Forrest A. Kerr
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
17
File Size:
5051 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1931

Abstract

Introduction During recent years the work of the Geological Survey in northwestern British Columbia has been in the nature of reconnaissance and exploratory mapping, largely for the purpose of gaining knowledge of the potential mineral-producing zones known to occur along the eastern side of the Coast range, and also to gather such data as might facilitate their exploitation. Commencing with fairly detailed mapping in the more accessible parts, the work has been continued and expanded until now an understanding has been gained of the more general features of a continuous section along the range for a distance of about two hundred miles. Geographically, northern British Columbia is more or less isolated. It is cut off from the central part of the Province by a rugged and mountainous country which, except for the telegraph line and a rarely travelled trail along it, is not penetrated by any developed routes or lines of communication. To the west, it is cut off from the Pacific by the Coast range, an extremely rugged area sixty to eighty miles in width which, except along the few navigable rivers cutting across it, cannot be readily traversed. Politically, it is further isolated in this direction by the narrow strip of south-eastern Alaska which borders the coast and extends inland to the axis of the range.
Citation

APA: Forrest A. Kerr  (1931)  Defining the Mineral Zones of Northern British Columbia

MLA: Forrest A. Kerr Defining the Mineral Zones of Northern British Columbia. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1931.

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