(Download) "Preliminary Report on Gowganda Mining Division District of Nipissing Ontario. 1909" by W. H. Collins ~ eBook PDF Kindle ePub Free
eBook details
- Title: Preliminary Report on Gowganda Mining Division District of Nipissing Ontario. 1909
- Author : W. H. Collins
- Release Date : January 20, 2021
- Genre: Engineering,Books,Professional & Technical,
- Pages : * pages
- Size : 6648 KB
Description
INTRODUCTION.
LOCATION AND AREA.
The portion of the Montreal River region with which the present report deals lies in the extreme western part of the District of Nipissing, in the neighbourhood of N. Lat. 47·45, and about 85 miles north of the town of Sudbury. It includes an area of 350 square miles, most of which lies between the two large branches of the Montreal river, which empties into Lake Timiskaming on the west side.
STATEMENT OF WORK.
The Algoma-Nipissing boundary line was run in 1897 by Alexander Niven, O.L.S. These surveys, with representations of some of the larger lakes, had been compiled by the Geological Survey of Canada on a scale of 16 miles to one inch;[1] and on a scale of eight miles by the Crown Lands Department of Ontario. With these as a guide and summary of the existing geographical knowledge it was decided to make a micrometer and prismatic compass survey of both branches.
During the past season a prismatic compass and micrometer survey was made of both branches of the Montreal river and all navigable waters adjoining them. This work was done by Messrs. T. Firth, J. R. Marshall and A. B. Moffatt. Most of the small ponds lying some distance from a canoe route were located by rapid chain and compass methods, and in a few instances west of Duncan lake by a compass triangulation from hilltops; the larger ones have been
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measured by pacing or chaining, the smaller ones sketched. Some of the more prominent hills were located by triangulation, and their heights ascertained by aneroid determinations. The water levels were obtained in the same way, but cannot as yet be referred to sea-level.
The geological work was performed by the writer, assisted by Mr. Firth. Besides a thorough examination of all the surveyed routes, a systematic examination of the intervening country was carried out as closely as the time and varied requirements of the area would permit. As this was the first season spent in the district and a continuation of the work is anticipated, the present results are offered as incomplete and subject to revision.
HISTORY OF DEVELOPMENT.
Since the discovery of silver cobalt ores at Cobalt in 1903, exploration has shown the adjacent country to be locally enriched by mineral veins of the same character and genesis. At the close of 1907 an area 65 miles long in a north and south direction, and about 45 miles wide, extending from Lake Timiskaming and the Ontario-Quebec boundary westward, was known to include at least ten mineralized districts besides the principal one at Cobalt, of which the most recently found lie near the Montreal river. It has also become known gradually that these deposits are closely connected with the post-Huronian quartz diabase of the region. This diabase was known to extend for a very considerable distance farther west, leading to the inference that more discoveries were to be expected in that direction. The spring of 1908 saw interest centred upon the Montreal River finds, and early in the season active exploration had commenced. The Montreal river, up to that time, had not been regarded with special favour, the diabase being considered of no economic importance, but with the new conceptions gained by exploitation of the silver-cobalt district, this formation in the west began to attract attention. At the beginning of the field work, early in July, a considerable number of prospecting parties were on the ground, as far west as Duncan and Pigeon lakes. During July and August this movement, encouraged by the succession of mineral discoveries that were being made near Bloom and Everett lakes, increased steadily, in spite of the scarcity of available topographical and geological information dealing with the region.
Early in August discoveries of native silver were made almost
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simultaneously by Messrs. Mann and associates, and by Messrs. Crawford and Dobie on the west side of Gowganda lake, but were not made public until the first week in September when the claims were recorded at Elk Lake and specimens were exhibited. Twenty-four hours later the leading canoes of an inrushing body of prospectors had reached the new field, and within two weeks most of the promising country between Gowganda and Elkhorn lakes and northward had been staked, regardless of the mineral discoveries necessary to validate the claims. Since then numerous discoveries have been made, and the news of a new silver field, until recently confined to the Montreal River and Cobalt districts, has spread widely. As a consequence, a mid-winter rush is now in progress, and hundreds of prospectors, regardless of deep snow and severe cold, are entering the country. Much inadvisable staking will be done, no doubt, before spring, but the disappearance of the snow and reopening of river navigation will certainly be followed by an increased rush of prospectors.