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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.

Jun 14, 2020, 7 tweets

We love getting questions about mining, minerals and geology! We were asked about the historical MacLean Brook #gold mine in #CapeBreton Regional Municipality:
#nspoli #cbpoli #novascotia #CBRM
@JaimeBattiste

The first written reference to a gold mine in MacLean Brook was in a Geological Survey of Canada report in 1876. There do not appear to any other written references to the mine until the early 1990s.
#nspoli #cbpoli #novascotia #CBRM #capebreton

In 1993-94, the Department of Natural Resources investigated the site, finding blocks of mineralized quartz in the brook’s bed which they followed upstream to its source in a trench located along the east bank of the brook (325 metres southeast of Highway 223).
#nspoli #cbpoli

The trench is not part of the original mine – it’s about 10 metres south of the mined vein – and it’s not known who dug the trench, or when.
#nspoli #cbpoli #novascotia #CBRM #capebreton

DNR also found a pile of quartz waste rock from the from the trench. Samples revealed a bunch of metals in the rock, including gold, silver, lead, copper and zinc.
Panning of streams in the area also has shown there to be free gold in 2 streams.
#nspoli #cbpoli #CBRM #capebreton

Unfortunately, there is little additional information available about the historical mine or the other occurrences of metals in the area. The area is overgrown and the mine was likely very small with few records kept.
#nspoli #cbpoli #novascotia #CBRM #capebreton

However, it is an interesting – and somewhat mysterious! – site that may deserve further exploration.
#nspoli #cbpoli #novascotia #CBRM #capebreton

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