The Lignite Deposit at Onakawana, Moose River Basin, Ontario

- Organization:
- Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
- Pages:
- 29
- File Size:
- 6953 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1930
Abstract
The lignite deposit at Onakawana on the Abitibi river is of particular interest at the present time, since the Ontario Government has recently decided to proceed with the extension of the Temiskaming and Northern Ontario railway to James bay. Forty-five miles of steel will be laid this year to the crossing of the Moose river. This will cross the lignite field. It has been known for many years that lignite occurred in the Moose River basin, but it was not until drilling was commenced at Blacksmith rapids (or Onakawana, as the camp is now known) in June, 1929, that a seam of economic thickness and extent was found. Early in 1929 the Ontario Legislature voted $25,000 for the carrying out of a drilling programme in the Moose River basin. This came as a culmination of two summers' exploratory work by the Geological Branch of the Ontario Department of Mines, and as the result of a report which said; in effect, that further information concerning the mineral resources of the basin could only be obtained by drilling, and that such a drilling programme was well worth while in order to establish once for all whether lignite, fire-clay, or oil or gas did or did not exist in economic quantities in the region.
Citation
APA:
(1930) The Lignite Deposit at Onakawana, Moose River Basin, OntarioMLA: The Lignite Deposit at Onakawana, Moose River Basin, Ontario. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1930.