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The Birch Lake copper deposit, Saskatchewan.MacDougall, John Finlay. January 1952 (has links)
During the period from December 1949 until October 1951, the author was employed by the Hudson Bay Mining and Smelting Company at Birch Lake, Saskatchewan. During this period a diamond drilling program was carried out to investigate a mineralized shear zone occuring at Birch Lake. This resulted in the discovery of several small high grade copper bodies. It is the purpose of this thesis to describe the occurence of these bodies as fully as possible. The information has been obtained from a suite of ore specimens and representative rock specimens collected by the author while employed by the Hudson Bay Mining and Smelting Company. Dr. A. R. Byers, of the University of Saskatchewan, graciously supp1ied a geological map of the area based on his investigations during the summer of 1951. [...]
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Study of the hornfels collar around Mount Bruno.Lyall, H. B. January 1952 (has links)
The study of the hornfels collar around Mount Bruno was undertaken at the suggestion of Dr. T.H. Clark. The writer spent a total of seven days in the field in the autumn of 1950 using the pace and compass method of survey. Aerial photographs, approximately 4”: 1 mile, were of considerable aid in this project for the only map available for Mount Bruno is the Beloeil Sheet, 1”: l mile, of the National Topographie Series, on which the contour linas are not sufficiently detailed to be of much assistance in mapping. The investigation had a threefold purpose: (1) To locate, as accurately as possible, the contact between the hornfels and the intrusive. (2) To determine the relationship of the structure of the surrounding Lower Lorraine formation to the intrusive. (3) To discuss the metamorphism resulting from the intrusive activity. An attempt has also been made to provide a solution for any related problems that have developed during the course of this study. [...]
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The Tinguaite and related dike rocks of Rosemount quarry, Montreal East.Grant, Ian Craig. January 1952 (has links)
Microscopie examination and comparison of chemical analyses have indicated the possibility of the common origin of the rocks of the thesis area and that of Mount Royal. However, final proof was obtained using the Barth system of petrographic calculations. These show the tinguaite to be a differentiate of the nepheline-syenite, while the dike rocks have been derived from the original essexite magma.
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Distribution of acid volcanic rocks in the Superior Province of the Canadian Shield.Grady, John Cecil. January 1952 (has links)
Mapping and petrographic studies within the Shield area have been extended to a point where integration of the mass of data included in published reports and maps should provide a much more accurate view of conditions prevailing during the Precambrian time than was heretofore possible. This thesis is a contribution toward that end. The particular task undertaken was a regional study of the character and distribution of acid volcanics within that part of the Southern Shield referred to by Gill (1949) as the “Superior Province”. The method followed was to assemble all published information relating to acid volcanics; to plot on maps such data as can be shown graphically and to summarize the rest. Five maps have been prepared of various districts in the Province where these rocks occur. Descriptions of occurrences, including Tables of Formations and references have been assembled in an Appendix.
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Geology of the Perth map area, Lanark and Leeds counties, Ontario.Dugas, Jean. January 1952 (has links)
The area covered by this thesis is in the province of Ontario between longitudes 76° 00’ to 76° 30’ west and latitudes 44° 45’ to 45° 00’ north. It includes most of Lanark and part of Leeds counties. Within the county of Lanark there are parts of the townships of Dalhousie, Drummond, Montague, Bathurst, North Elmsley, South Sherbrooke and the entire township of North Burgess. The county of Leeds includes parts of the townships of North Crosby, South Burgess, South Elmsley, Bastard and Kitley. The largest towns in the map-area are: Perth, the county town of Lanark, which is in the central part of the area and has a population of 4,500, and Smiths Falls which is on the eastern edge of the map-area and has a population of 8,500. Perth was founded in 1816 by Scottish soldiers disbanded after the war of 1812 and was for a long time a military town. Highway No. 15 from Ottawa and Highway No. 7 from Toronto join at Perth, which is at 50 miles from Ottawa. Highway No. 29 from Brockville and Highway No. 15 from Kingston cross the southeastern part of the map-area. A network of secondary roads provides easy access to all parts of the map-area and allowed detailed mapping to be made in a few months. Lot fences also form a good grid for surveying. The map-area can also be reached by railroad, the Canadian Pacific line from Montreal to Toronto going through Perth and Smiths Falls. Other railroads connect Smiths Falls with Brockville, Kingston, Carleton Place and Ottawa. [...]
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A study of the Kaniapiskau system in the Burnt Creek-Goodwood area, New Quebec and Labrador, Newfoundland.Dufresne, Cyrille. January 1952 (has links)
The Burnt Creek - Goodwood area, represents a part of the main ore zone on the contiguous exploration concessions of the Hollinger North Shore Exploration Company, in New Quebec, and of the Labrador Mining and Exploration Company, in Labrador, Newfoundland. The concessions cover the southern part of the “Labrador Trough”, a geological unit made up of folded and faulted sedimentary and volcanic series of late Precambrian Age. (Figure 1 ) This paper deals with a detailed study of the Kaniapiskau system with special reference to the Sokaman iron formation, the most important economic member of that system, in an area where large concentrations of iron ore ( as hematite and goethite ) occur within the iron formation. Field work conducted by the writer at various localities in the area during the summers of 1947, 1948 and 1949, particularly between Wishart Lake and Irony Mountain and to the north in the vicinity of Goodwood deposit ( Figure 2 ), together with field data of other members of the staff, form the basis of this study. The field work was followed by laboratory investigations at McGill University and at the University of Minnesota. A map of the vicinity of Burnt Creek accompanies this report to illustrate the major features of the geology of the area.
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Structural studies in an area at the headwaters of the McMurdo Creek, B.C.Henderson, Gerald Gordon Lewis January 1950 (has links)
The map-area straddles the crest of a major anticline within the Purcell Mountains of British Columbia. It is underlain by a conformable series of precambrian quartzite, limestone, and slate members. One limb of the major anticline is disturbed locally by a zone of minor folding. This minor folding has caused considerable plastic flowage in a thick limestone member of the series. As a result of the flowage, the limestone beds are intricately folded and have developed a distinctive layered structure. The origin of this layering by metamorphic differentiation is discussed. A series of quartz veins, containing small amounts of gold, occurs along the crest of the major anticline principally within the uppermost quartzite member. These appear to have been deposited from solutions which invaded fissures formed as a result of the folding.
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The Mina Lake graywacke, Sawyer Lake area, LabradorHogan, Howard R. January 1950 (has links)
The Sawyer Lake area is in central Labrador, between Sawyer lake and Comeback lake. It forms a northeast trending parallelogram about twenty miles long and three to five miles wide, covering in all about eighty-five square miles. It lies between latitudes 54° 26’ and 54°43’ north and longitudes 65°50’ and 66°0’ west.
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The geology of the Ymir map area, British ColumbiaMcAllister, Arnold Lloyd January 1950 (has links)
The Ymir area (long. 117° - 117°15’, lat. 49°15'- 49°30') lies just southeast of Nelson in the southern part of British Columbia. It includes 300 square miles of the area lying between Kootenay Lake and the Columbia River (Figure I). The western part of the area is easily accessible from the Ymir-Salmo road which runs nearly north-south along the western border of the map area. A branch line of the Great Northern Railroad follows along this road.
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A copper-nickel occurrence in Pardee township, Thunder Bay district, OntarioMcCuaig, James Auley January 1950 (has links)
During the summer of 1949 the writer carried out exploration work on a group of eight mining claims, known as the McCuaig group. These claims are located in Pardee Township, Thunder Bay District, Ontario. The property may be reached by means of a gravel road two miles long that branches off to the north from the Scott Highway at a point forty miles west of Fort William. The Scott Highway is a paved highway between Duluth, Minnesota, and Fort William, Ontario.
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