The Raising Of No. 7 Shaft At Britannia Mines

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
E. C. Roper
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
22
File Size:
6984 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1945

Abstract

THE Britannia Mining & Smelting Company, Limited, have been operating their property at Britannia Beach, B.C., continuously for nearly forty years and have mined over 33,000,000 tons of ore from orebodies within a belt of highly sheared rocks, five miles long by 2,000 feet wide. The property is in the Coast Range mountains, about twenty miles due north of Vancouver. The mountains rise abruptly from sea level to elevations of 4, 500 feet within a horizontal distance of 7,000 feet. The topography has enabled the orebodies to be developed by adit tunnels. The active mining levels are connected to the adits by incline and vertical service shafts. The main service adits are the 2200, 2700, and 4100 levels (see Figure 1). The mine surface shops, three bunk-houses, and over one hundred dwellings form the townsite camp at the portal of the 2200 level adit. A small camp of one bunk-house and a few dwellings is situated at the 2700 level portal. The beach surface shops and camp, adjacent to the 4100 level adit, service the mill, foundry, and other beach installations as well as the mining from the 4100 level. The ore mined from the various orebodies is delivered to the 4100 main haulage level through a system of rock raises and intermediate tramming levels and is hauled on the 4100 level to the mill.
Citation

APA: E. C. Roper  (1945)  The Raising Of No. 7 Shaft At Britannia Mines

MLA: E. C. Roper The Raising Of No. 7 Shaft At Britannia Mines. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1945.

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