Mines and Mineral Deposits of Canada<

- Organization:
- Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
- Pages:
- 118
- File Size:
- 35970 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1924
Abstract
It is almost exactly two hundred years since the foundations of the mining and metallurgical industries in Canada were laid. There '."'as nothing spectacular about this early start. It had to do with the most basic phases of these industries-the mining of coal and iron ore, and the manufacture of cast and wrought iron. At several points along the coast of Cape Breton island, coal seams may be seen outcropping quite conspicuously, and it is probable that they had been observed, and possibly worked in a small way, in very early times. However that may be, these coal seams have the distinction of being the first in North America of which there is any printed record, reference to them appearing in a volume by Nicolas Denys which was published in Paris in 1672. Regular coal mining in the district did not commence until about fifty years later, however. The metallurgists started their operations along the north shore of the St. Lawrence river. Here, at many points between Montreal and Quebec, are to be found deposits of bog iron ore, and in 1 730 a furnace for smelting such ore was established on the St. Maurice river. The St. Maurice forges continued in operation until 1880, and throughout that long period they were famed for the fine quality of castings produced, and also for a-superior wrought iron.
Citation
APA:
(1924) Mines and Mineral Deposits of Canada<MLA: Mines and Mineral Deposits of Canada<. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1924.