Milling and Metallurgy at New Calumet Mines

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Lyall J. Lichty
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
7
File Size:
2094 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1945

Abstract

THE property of New Calumet Mines, Limited, is on Calumet island, in the Ottawa river, about sixty-six miles northwest of Ottawa. Lead and zinc orebodies were discovered here in 1893. A gravity concentration plant was built in 1912 but was not a success metallurgically, and the plant was later destroyed by fire. A programme of diamond drilling on the property, started in 1937 and continuing to 1942, indicated ore reserves amounting to 1,300,000 tons averaging 2.75 per cent lead, 8.82 per cent zinc, and 0.041 oz. gold and 6.24 oz. silver per ton( l ). These orebodies have been developed underground by cross-cutting and drifting from a three-compartment vertical shaft, sunk to a depth of 745 feet. 'The ore is a contact metamorphic deposit occurring in rocks of the Grenville series, on or near the contact between biotite gneiss and an overlying calcareous amphibolite(2,3). It consists chiefly of iron-bearing sphalerite, galena, pyrrhotite, pyrite, and minor amounts of chalcopyriteand argentite. The gangue minerals closely associated with the ore are calcite, quartz, and various lime-silicate minerals.
Citation

APA: Lyall J. Lichty  (1945)  Milling and Metallurgy at New Calumet Mines

MLA: Lyall J. Lichty Milling and Metallurgy at New Calumet Mines. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1945.

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