Shaft Sinking Through Blairmore Sands and Paleozoic Water ... Bearing Limestones

- Organization:
- Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
- Pages:
- 10
- File Size:
- 5992 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1963
Abstract
In 1913, potash mineralization was recognized at a depth of over 7,000 feet in an oil-well hole (Norcanol's Radville No. 1 well) drilled near the town of Raddlle, Saskatchewan. Although, at this depth, potash is not considered mineable by conventional underground mining methods, this discovery shed the first light on the potash deposits of Saskatchewan in much the same manner as oil-well drilling was responsible for the first discovery of potash in the Carlsbad Basin of New Mexico in 19:25. The discovery near Radville alerted the oil-well geologists and, as a result potash mineralization was recognized in the Verbata No. 2 well, near Unity, Saskatchewan, in 1946. The mineralization, which was at a depth ?of 3,466 feet, graded more than 20 per cent K20 over a thickness of eleven feet. This discovery, as its depth, thickness and grade were all amenable to mining,
Citation
APA:
(1963) Shaft Sinking Through Blairmore Sands and Paleozoic Water ... Bearing LimestonesMLA: Shaft Sinking Through Blairmore Sands and Paleozoic Water ... Bearing Limestones. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1963.