The Geology of Nova Scotian Gypsum

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Nordau R. Goodman
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
6
File Size:
3909 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1954

Abstract

"IntroductionTHE HISTORY of Nova Scotia's gypsum industry goes back about two hundred years. The extensive deposits found in the Windsor formation, which is Lower Carboniferous, were the first discovered in North America and were known to the earliest .settlers. There has been a steady increase in production from these beds, except for minor setbacks in years of wars and depressions, but at the same time there has been a decrease in the number of operating quarries. This decrease reflects the change from the days of horse-and-cart recovery to the modern, large-scale, highly mechanized operations. In the beginning, almost any outcrop could •supply the tonnage requirements and the most •convenient were selected, but the millions of tons needed to meet present-day needs are not easily found.Despite the size and importance of the Nova Scotian deposits there has been little detailed geological work. Sir Charles Lyell, in 1843 ( 10), established that the beds are Lower Carboniferous and this was confirmed by Sir William Dawson (3) a .few years later. Both Lyell and Dawson agreed the calcium sulphate beds were an original part of a bedded series .but did not consider they resulted from a concentration of sea water. Lyell reached the conclusion that the gypsum was related to volcanic action in the form of heated vapours or hot springs. Dawson believed it was formed by the action •of sulphuric acid on calcium carbonate. The acid, derived from the oxidation •of iron pyrites which was abundant in the older formations, was carried by rivers into basins which were rich in shells."
Citation

APA: Nordau R. Goodman  (1954)  The Geology of Nova Scotian Gypsum

MLA: Nordau R. Goodman The Geology of Nova Scotian Gypsum. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1954.

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