Replacement Hematite Deposits, Steep Rock Lake, Ontario (6b2489a0-0c48-4eb8-8cf5-a98ff5773b21)

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 26
- File Size:
- 996 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1943
Abstract
SUBSTANTIAL deposits of Bessemer hematite have been found recently by drilling beneath Steep Rock Lake, Ontario, which is situated in the northern part of the Lake Superior Region. It will be practicable to divert the waters flowing into this lake and develop open pits on the upper part of two large ore bodies by damming off and pumping out the water in the part of the lake in which they occur. Ultimately, the bulk of the ore will be mined by underground methods. Owing to the generally massive nature of the rocks in the area, no underground flows of major consequence are anticipated after diversion of the lake. The Steep Rock deposits are attributed in origin to hydrothermal replacement. They were formed, for the most part, along an unconformable, brecciated contact between the Steep Rock limestone and an overlying younger volcanic series. The replacing solutions came in as igneous after-effects, following upon the intrusion of basic igneous rocks that invaded the hanging-wall volcanics. It is believed that this took place in a geological period roughly equivalent to late Middle Huronian, which was the period when the most extensive iron-bearing rocks of the Lake Superior Region were formed. Comparison is made with other deep-seated iron-ore bodies in the Lake Superior Region, the origins of which are ascribed in the discussion to hydrothermal replacement.
Citation
APA:
(1943) Replacement Hematite Deposits, Steep Rock Lake, Ontario (6b2489a0-0c48-4eb8-8cf5-a98ff5773b21)MLA: Replacement Hematite Deposits, Steep Rock Lake, Ontario (6b2489a0-0c48-4eb8-8cf5-a98ff5773b21). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1943.