The Wilberforce Radium Occurrence

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Hugh S. Spence
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
40
File Size:
11038 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1930

Abstract

This paper deals with an occurrence of radium ore near Wilberforce, Haliburton county, Ontario, upon which development work has recently been undertaken and which seems more likely to prove of commercial grade than any other deposit' of radioactive minerals hitherto found in Canada. This occurrence is sometimes called the Richardson property, after Mr. W. M. Richardson, the discoverer, and will be so referred to in the present paper. Occurrences of radioactive minerals are not uncommon in eastern Canada, and a number are recorded in the literature. The earliest of such references is probably that in Geology of Canada, 1863, where is mentioned an occurrence of uraninite at Mamainse, on the east shore of lake Superior. The mineral was first described by J. L. Leconte, in 1847, under the name of coracite, and was said to occur in a two-inch vein at the contact of trap and syenite. Search for this locality in recent years has proved unsuccessful. Obalski, in 1894, mentions (1) the occurrence of uraninite at a mica mine near Murray Bay, Que. In 1903, Obalski records (2) tests made on this uraninite by Rutherford and the Curies and the determination in it of the then newly-discovered element radium. In 1901, he mentions (3) the occurrence of uraninite at the Villeneuve mica mine, on the Lievre river, and of samarskite at the Maisonneuve mica mine, in Berthier county.
Citation

APA: Hugh S. Spence  (1930)  The Wilberforce Radium Occurrence

MLA: Hugh S. Spence The Wilberforce Radium Occurrence. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1930.

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