Prospecting and Exploration of Dominion Explorers, Limited, in the Great Bear Lake-Coppermine River Area

- Organization:
- Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
- Pages:
- 15
- File Size:
- 4506 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1931
Abstract
The presence of copper-bearing rocks in the Coppermine River area of Arctic Canada has long been known. Word of this was probably circulated along the Arctic and Hudson Bay coasts by the Eskimo, who no doubt traded articles made from native copper among themselves. It is not known whether any of these ever reached the southern shores of Hudson bay. The Indians, also, knew of the occurrence of copper here, as they served as guides to Hearne when he made a successful trip over land from Hudson bay to the Coppermine river. The possible commercial importance of these copper deposits was early appreciated by the Hudson's Bay Company, who on December 7th, 1770, despatched Samuel Hearne from Fort Prince of Wales, now Fort Churchill, to investigate them. He reached the then unnamed river at a point forty miles from its mouth on July 14th, 1771, and after surveying the river to its mouth and naming it the Coppermine, he retraced his steps to Fort Churchill by an overland route. Hearne's expedition was probably the most remarkable and arduous ever attempted in Arctic exploration, but the actual value derived from the trip was entirely out of proportion with the hardships he must have suffered. He verified the occurrence of native copper, but his astronomical and other observations were of little value. Until 1912 no concerted effort was made to obtain any definite information as to the geology and economic value of the Copper-mine deposits.
Citation
APA:
(1931) Prospecting and Exploration of Dominion Explorers, Limited, in the Great Bear Lake-Coppermine River AreaMLA: Prospecting and Exploration of Dominion Explorers, Limited, in the Great Bear Lake-Coppermine River Area. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1931.