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Modern mining creates jobs for Nova Scotians, provides essential materials we all use every day and takes excellent care of the environment.

Jan 23, 2020, 11 tweets

We love getting questions about #mining, #minerals and #geology! In response to our post yesterday about how #NovaScotia’s #gold deposits formed, we were asked about “barrel quartz.” Here’s our answer:

#nspoli #NS #CB #capebreton #Waverley @waverleyns @SteveStreatch @Bill_Horne

Barrel quartz is a term used to describe the #gold deposit on #LaidlawHill in #Waverley in the 1800s. It isn’t a technical/geological term. The miners used it to describe what they saw: folded, gold-bearing quartz veins whose outcrops are corrugated and resemble barrels.
#nspoli

The quartz veins that host the #gold are hard and surrounded by soft shale. When the rocks were compressed by forces resulting from tectonic plate collision, the quartz vein buckled to form barrel shapes but the surrounding shale reacted like toothpaste and absorbed the pressure.

The barrel shape looked distinctive to the miners so the term was invented.
#nspoli #NovaScotia #Waverley #NS

Miners of that era were generally not what we would now consider geologists or engineers – sciences that underpin the modern mining industry – so they often invented terms that were descriptive, especially when something reminded them of something else.
#nspoli #NovaScotia #NS

Another example is the old miners in the #Londonderry iron mine called their best ore "bottle ore.” The actual term was botryoidal hematite but they had trouble pronouncing “botryoidal” and shortened it to bottle.
#nspoli

#Gold was discovered in #Waverley in 1861 on the farm of Charles P. Allen. Allen moved to the area from #Massachusetts and built furniture and bucket factories. Today, the local high school is named after him.
#nspoli #NovaScotia #NS #Waverley

Charles P. Allen named his farm #Waverley after the novel Waverley by Sir Walter Scott and the area came to be known by the same name.
From 1860-1868 #Waverley's population grew from 200 to 2000 thanks to the #goldrush. The area had over 30 gold mines in 1864.
#nspoli #NovaScotia

By 1869 the small-time operators working in the area were driven out by flooding issues. The area was mainly idle for 25 years until 1899 when a large portion of Laidlaw Hill was purchased by the #Waverley #Gold #Mining Company, and the first systematic mining started.
#nspoli

#Mining stopped in 1903 except for a few ounces of production in 1905, 1915, 1918 and in the 1930s. Total production in #Waverley was 73,000 ounces of #gold.
#nspoli #NovaScotia #NS

#Waverley Gold Rush Days celebrates the area’s #gold mining history. It’s an example of how historical mining contributes to #NS' tourism industry (ie the Museum of Industry in #Stellarton, miners museums in #GlaceBay and #Springhill, the #Malagash Salt Mine Museum, etc)
#nspoli

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