Geology of the Hat Creek Coal Deposits

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
D. D. Campbell
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
10
File Size:
7076 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1977

Abstract

The Hat Creek coal deposit s occur within folded and faulted Tertiary (Eocene) strata of the Coldwater Group, which comprises weakly lithified shales, siltstones and conglomerates underlying the floor and lower flanks of the valley of Upper Hat Cr eek . This upland valley,16 miles in length and 2-4 miles in width, is located within the eastern foothills of the Coast Mountains, 120 miles northeast of Vancouver, approximately midway between the towns of Lillooet and Ashcroft, in the Interior Dry Belt of British Columbia . Most of the valley floor is covered by till and glacial outwash deposits ranging up to 500 feet in depth. Became of this overburden cover , the majority of the data on the coal deposit have been obtained from diamond drilling done during 1974?76 by the property owner, B .C. Hydro and Power Authority. Because of the limitations imposed by the lack of out crop, the Tertiary geology at Upper Hat Creek is imperfectly known; however, it appears from correlation with other coal-bearing Tertiary remnants in the southern interior of the province that these remnants, including Upper Hat Creek, may represent preserved segments of the western shoreline of a Tertiary continental sea along which deltaic swamps developed and were sustained for unusually long stable periods, giving rise to the world's thickest known coal beds.
Citation

APA: D. D. Campbell  (1977)  Geology of the Hat Creek Coal Deposits

MLA: D. D. Campbell Geology of the Hat Creek Coal Deposits. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1977.

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