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Sodium sulphate deposits of western CanadaBy PAULL. BROUGHTON
Commercial deposits of sodium sulphate are harvested from alkaline lakes that are widespread throughout semi-arid southern Saskatchewan and adjacent southeastern A lberta. Concentration of sodium sulp
Jan 1, 1984
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Barite in British ColumbiaBy Z. D. Hora
Commercial production of barite commenced in British Columbia in 1940; shipments have been recorded from ten deposits, of which four are particularly significant: The Brisco, Silver Giant, Parson, and
Jan 1, 1984
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Quartzites purs du QuebeciaBy Jehan Rondot
Les bancs de quartzite inhabituellement purs et epais decouverts lors de la cartographie geologique de la region de Charlevoix sont maintenant entres au stade de !'exploitation et se revelent etre une
Jan 1, 1984
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Silica in British ColumbiaBy Z. D. Hora
Sev_eral dozen si lica occurrences have been reported from various parts of Brit ish Columbia. Some represent hydrothermal veins or parts of pegmatite bodies; other are recrystall ized sandstones. Sev
Jan 1, 1984
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Contexte geologique et genese des gites d'amiante du sud du QuebecBy Robert Y. Lamarche
On exploite le chrysotile dans le sud du Quebec depuis plus de cent ans. Au cours des dernieres decennies, cette variete d'amiante est devenue une des principales substances minerales produites au Que
Jan 1, 1984
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Black Island silica quarryBy F. E. P. PEARSON
Sandstone quarried from an island in Lake Winnipeg is barged 130 km to a processing plant at Selkirk on the Red River. The stone is white, poorly consolidated, and consists of rounded quartz grains of
Jan 1, 1984
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Summary of industrial minerals in British ColumbiaBy Z. D. Hora
Traditionally, industrial minerals in British Columbia comprise about 10 per cent of the combined value of mineral, coal, petroleum and natural gas production. Over the years a wide variety of industr
Jan 1, 1984
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Cretaceous non-swelling bentonite from the Manitoba EscarpmentBy BARRY BANNATYNE
Non-swelling bentonite has been quarried in Manitoba by Pembina Mountain Clays Limited since 1941. It occurs in several thin layers near the base of the Pembina Member of the Upper Cretaceous Vermilio
Jan 1, 1984
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Ojibway Salt Mine, Windsor, OntarioBy Nordau R. Goodman
T-he Ojibway Salt Mine near Windsor, Ontario, produces almost two million tonnes of97% pure rock salt annually. The salt is mined from the middle F horizon of the Silurian Salina Formation. The salt b
Jan 1, 1984
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Blue Mountain nepheline syenite deposit, Nephton, OntarioBy DALE MacGREGOR, VERA TUREK
The Blue Mountain nepheline syenite deposit has been the subject of several detailed studies. It has been variously referred to as an intrusive stock, a metasomatic deposit, an intrusive sill and a me
Jan 1, 1984
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Magdalen Islands salt depositsBy Marcel Vallee, D. C. Gagnon, C. CARBONNEAU, P. ST-JULIEN
The Magdalen Islands archipelago, a cluster of fifteen islands, is located near the centre of the Gulf of St. Lawrence on the thickest portion of the Carboniferous Fundy Basin of the Maritime Pro vinc
Jan 1, 1984
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Fluorspar mines at St. Lawrence, NewfoundlandBy JAMES E. TILSLEY
Veins at St. Lawrence near the tip of the Burin Peninsula in southeast New/ oundland have been the major Canadian source of fluorspar. Some 2.8 million tonnes were shipped during the period 1933-1977,
Jan 1, 1984
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Limestone in British ColumbiaBy Z. D. Hora
Limestone of economic interest is widespread in British Columbia. Triassic deposits on Texada Island are a convenient 1idewa1er source of li111es1one for cemen1 and lime for 1he Pacific orthwes1. Perm
Jan 1, 1984
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Jade in British Columbia and Yukon Territory*By S. F. LEAMING
Jade occurs with alpine-1ype serpe111iniIes in a be// of middle Paleozoic to Triassic rocks extending from southern British Columbia in10 Yukon Territory. Most known deposiIs are in BriIish Columbia a
Jan 1, 1984
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Kaolin clays and lignite of the Moose River Basin, OntarioBy G. R. Guillet
Important resources of kaolin, refractory clay and lignite, not found elsewhere in Ontario, occur with quartz sand of glassgrade quality in unconsolidated Mesozoic sediments of the Moose River Basin i
Jan 1, 1984
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Ceramic clays and bentonites of the Prairie ProvincesBy JOHN H. HUDSON
Ceramic clays of the Prairie Provinces range in age from Lower Cretaceous to Pleistocene and Recent. Two significant ceramic clay horizons are the Paleocene Willo wbunch Member of the Ravenscrag Forma
Jan 1, 1984
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Marl in AlbertaBy DON E. MacDONALD
Marl in Alberta is confined to highly specific geological, hydrogeologica/ and climatic settings. Tufa is fa irly abundant in those areas of western Alberta where bedrock is of the Paskapoo Formation.
Jan 1, 1984
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Summary of industrial minerals in AlbertaBy W. N. Hamilton
Industrial minerals are plentiful in Alberta. Although exi ting in variety and in quantity, they constitute a minor segment of the province's mineral industry, which is based on oil and gas. In 1983 A
Jan 1, 1984
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Geology of some gravel deposits in the Edmonton region, AlbertaBy W. A. Dixon Edwards
Gravel deposi ts in the Edmonton region are unique in their diversity in origin and age. The deposits were described first around the turn of the century (Dawson and McConnell 1896) . Among the many m
Jan 1, 1984
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Summary of industrial minerals in Newfoundland and LabradorBy PAUL L. DEAN
Industrial mineral deposits are widespread in Newfoundland and Labrador and a variety of commodities are produced. The province has the only pyrophyllite mine in Canada and also produces asbestos, gyp
Jan 1, 1984