Marmora: Bethlehem Beneficiates Open Pit Ore, Pelletizes Concentrates, at New Iron Producer

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
4
File Size:
768 KB
Publication Date:
Jul 1, 1955

Abstract

Bethlehem Steel Co. has just brought an all-new iron ore mine into production at Marmora, Canada, about 120 miles east of Toronto. High grade pellets produced at the mine from open-pit magnetite ore travel 64 miles by rail to the port at Picton, then go by Lake boat to help supply Bethlehem's Lackawanna, N. Y., plant. At full production about half a million tons of pellets a year will be shipped, and mining will be at a scale of more than a million tons per year of ore. Aeromagnetic surveys carried out in 1949 by the Ontario Dept. of Mines and the Canadian Geological Survey revealed an anomaly that interested Bethlehem geologists. By 1951 the company had put down some 40 diamond drillholes ranging from 460 to 1800 ft to block out the magnetite replacement deposit which lies in pre-Cambrian limestone below about 130 ft of Paleozoic limestone. The orebody, roughly 2100 ft long and up to 400 ft wide, averages about 37 pct iron, too low for direct shipment. Not only construction of concentrating and pelletizing facilities, but 20 million tons of stripping lay ahead before production could start
Citation

APA:  (1955)  Marmora: Bethlehem Beneficiates Open Pit Ore, Pelletizes Concentrates, at New Iron Producer

MLA: Marmora: Bethlehem Beneficiates Open Pit Ore, Pelletizes Concentrates, at New Iron Producer. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1955.

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