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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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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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Summary of industrial minerals in New BrunswickBy DONALD E. BARNETT
Since the days of early settlement ew Brunswick has produced a variety of industrial minerals but it is perhaps only the recent discoveries of significant reserves of potash that have elevated the mea
Jan 1, 1984
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Texada Island limestone quarryBy P. M. STILES
Acquired in 1957, the limestone quarry of Ideal Basic Industries on Texada Island north of Vancouver has become a major supplier of high purity limestone and construction stone. Crushed limestone prod
Jan 1, 1984
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Brisco Barite MineBy G. R. MANSON
The Brisco Barite Mine lies 70 km south-southeast of Golden, British Columbia. Barile mineralization occurs in a northstriking brecciation zone within Ordovician-Silurian Beaver/ oot dolomites and qua
Jan 1, 1984
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Fluorite in British ColumbiaBy Z. D. Hora
The major fluorite producer in British Columbia was the Rock Candy Mine, inactive since 1942. Other deposits of economic interest include the Rexspar deposit, in which fluorite is associated with uran
Jan 1, 1984
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Summary of industrial minerals in Nova ScotiaBy John H. Fowler
Nova Scotia has been mining and exporting industrial minerals for over two hundred years. As an industrial mineral producer, this province continues to rank as the number one gypsum mining and exporti
Jan 1, 1984
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Gypsum in Atlantic CanadaBy J. R. CAMERON
Gypsum is mined in all Atlantic Provinces except Prince Edward Island. It is generally thought to have been derived from the hydration of anhydrite in areas of minimal drainage. Late Devonian downwarp
Jan 1, 1984
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Cement in CanadaBy D. H. Stonehouse
Of the f ive Canadian cement producing regions- Atlantic, Quebec, Ontario, Prairie and Pacific-Ontario has the greatest capacity and normally produces the most cement. However, during the last 5 years
Jan 1, 1984
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The Chipewyan Red Granitea building stone prospectBy John D. Godfrey
Precambrian Shield rocks, exposed in the extreme northeast corner of Alberta, provide the only possibility for a granitic building stone development in the province. Among a wide variety of granitoid
Jan 1, 1984
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Sand and gravel deposits of the greater Vancouver areaBy Z. D. Hora
Sand and gravel resources of the southern coastal region of British Columbia may be linked to various episodes of Wisconsin glaciation. During Wisconsin and probably earlier times, the Fraser Lowland
Jan 1, 1984
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Diamonds in Canada*By J. J. . BRUMMER
Kimber/ires are intrusive rocks whose main constituenr, olivine, has been altered entirely or almosr enrirely ro serpentine. Texture usually is porphyritic, superimposed upon a brecciared one. Diamond
Jan 1, 1984
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Les mineraux industriels du Quebec Summary of industrial minerals of QuebecBy Henri-Louis Jacob
Le secteur des substances non-metalliques repose au Quebec sur !'exploitation et la transformation d'une dizaine de mineraux ainsi que sur la production de materiaux de base destines surtout a l'indus
Jan 1, 1984
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Exploration techniques for sand and gravelBy D. F. VanDine
The phases of a typical exploration program for sand and gravel resources include: (1) collection and assessment of existing information; (2) air photo interpretation and remote sensing; (3) ground in
Jan 1, 1984
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Potash in western CanadaBy ANNE FUZESY
Soluble potassium salts in bedded underground salt deposits supply most of The world demand for potassium f or agricultural and industrial use. The potassium salts, sylvite and carnallite, were f irs,
Jan 1, 1984
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Anorthosite in CanadaBy R. M. BUCHANAN
The segment of Canadian industry based on smelting of alum in um and manufacture of consumer products is based entirely on imported alumina and bauxite. In the absence of Canadian bauxite deposits, co
Jan 1, 1984
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Plutons of the Chibougamau-Desmaraisville Belt - A Preliminary SurveyBy D. Racicot, T. Hanel, E. H. Chown
Over thirty plutons in the Chibougamau-Desmaraisville belt were examined briefly in the field and sampled, in addition to the few masses that have been studied in detail. The survey indicates that the
Jan 1, 1984
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Gold Mineralization in Ontario I - The Role of Banded Iron FormationBy A. J. Macdonald
Gold deposits hosted by banded iron formation (BIF) in Ontario exhibit a marked association with localized zones of deformed and hydrothermally altered BI:F . Secondary sulphides and carbonates are co
Jan 1, 1984
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Paleography, Isostasy and Crustal Evolution of the Archean Abitibi BeltBy W. Mueller, M. Rocheleau, E. Dimroth
The paleogeographic evolution of the Abitibi Belt is subdivided into three phases, namely: 1) a phase of the growth of a submarine volcanic chain, 2) a phase of the emergence and growth of volcanic is
Jan 1, 1984
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Lithogeochemistry of the Gilman and Blondeau Formations in the Chibougamau RegionBy P. Trudel, M. A. . Cloutier
This lithogeochemical study demonstrates that the Gilman and Blondeau Formations in the Chibougamau area belong to a subalkaline suite of tholeiitic affinity poor in potassium. The Gilman Formation is
Jan 1, 1984