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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.

Jul 29, 2020, 8 tweets

Former mines and quarries often become parks and protected areas. For example, the #TerenceBay Wilderness Area includes two sites that were quarried for building stone used in some of #Halifax’s most beautiful buildings.
#nspoli #cbpoli #novascotia
@IainTRankin @geoffregan

Stone was extracted at the Brookfield Quarry, at the mouth of the #TerenceBay River in #Halifax, from 1900-1907 by Samuel M. Brookfield. The quarry had two derricks and a wharf.
Stone was loaded onto barges...
#nspoli #cbpoli #novascotia
@IainTRankin @geoffregan

...and towed to #Halifax where it was used in buildings like the Bank of Commerce Building (aka Merrill Lynch Building, 5171 George Street) which was built in 1906. The stone was chosen to convey the strength and stability of a bank.
#nspoli #cbpoli
@IainTRankin @geoffregan

Brookfield immigrated to #NovaScotia from England in 1852. He became a prominent entrepreneur and builder in #Halifax from 1871, when he became president of his father’s successful construction company, until his death in 1924.
#nspoli #cbpoli
@IainTRankin @geoffregan

He also had a range of other business interests, including mining and serving as the first president of the Maritime Telegraph and Telephone Company which later became Bell Aliant.
#nspoli #cbpoli #novascotia
@IainTRankin @geoffregan

Not surprisingly given its name, there was also extraction done at Quarry Lake in the early 1900s. Blocks of stone were hauled to the #TerenceBay River, loaded onto barges and taken to #Halifax.
#nspoli #cbpoli #novascotia
@IainTRankin @geoffregan

#TerenceBay also had a brief and unfortunate period of #gold exploration. Four shallow shafts (a couple of metres deep) and several small test pits were dug around 1940-41.
Father J. J. Lanigan, the local pastor, staked the property...
#nspoli #cbpoli
@IainTRankin @geoffregan

...on behalf of his parish and parish funds financed the exploration work. It seems that Lanigan found quartz veins – which is what most #NovaScotia #gold is found in – but the veins contained fool’s gold (aka pyrite).
#nspoli #cbpoli
@IainTRankin @geoffregan

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