British Columbia Ministry of Energy, Mines and Natural Gas and Responsible for Housing
News | The Premier Online | Ministries & Organizations | Job Opportunities | Main Index

MINFILE Home page  ARIS Home page  MINFILE Search page  Property File Search
Help Help
File Created: 24-Jul-1985 by BC Geological Survey (BCGS)
Last Edit:  29-Jun-1989 by Peter S. Fischl (PSF)

Summary Help Help

NMI
Name ROSEBANK, DUNNS NOOK Mining Division Victoria
BCGS Map 092B043
Status Past Producer NTS Map 092B06W
Latitude 048º 26' 36'' UTM 10 (NAD 83)
Longitude 123º 27' 34'' Northing 5365679
Easting 466022
Commodities Limestone, Marble, Building Stone Deposit Types R09 : Limestone
R04 : Dimension stone - marble
Tectonic Belt Insular Terrane Wrangell
Capsule Geology

The Rosebank deposit is located on the west side of Esquimalt Harbour, 9 kilometres west of Victoria.

A band of limestone, 400 metres wide, extends westward from the shore of Esquimalt Harbour for at least 2 kilometres hosted within greenstone of the Wark Gneiss. The Wark Gneiss is possibly the metamorphic equivalent of a mafic unit of the Paleozoic Sicker Group, the latest metamorphism having taken place in the Jurassic. The limestone strikes 110 degrees and dips 70 degrees southwest to 70 degrees northeast. The limestone is extensively fractured and one distinct fracture cleavage strikes northwest and dips approximately 70 degrees northeast. Randomly orientated, greenish, mafic dykes a few centimetres to 15 metres wide are locally quite numerous.

The deposit is comprised of very fine-grained, dark bluish grey to nearly white limestone that commonly displays banding parallel to the fracture cleavage. Most of the limestone is high calcium in composition. Occasional patches and small masses of magnesian limestone occur along the margins of the band and along contacts with dykes. A sample from a quarry 900 metres from Esquimalt Harbour contained 54.70 per cent CaO, 0.60 per cent MgO, 1.08 per cent SiO2, 0.44 per cent Al2O3, 0.12 per cent Fe2O3 and 0.06 per cent sulphur (CANMET Report 811, page 142, Sample 1).

Between 1912 and 1933, 218,282 tonnes of limestone were quarried. In 1933, the plant was dismantled and the property was eventually acquired by the Department of National Defense.

Bibliography
EMPR AR 1906-24; 1907-23,157; 1908-25,166; 1909-25; 1910-25; *1911-28,208,209; 1912-28,199; 1913-27,292; 1914-28,387; 1915-33,291; 1916-31, 367; 1917-31,295; 1918-30,308; 1919-28; 1920-28; 1921-29; 1922-29; 1923-29; 1924-30; 1925-55; 1926-32; 1929-436; 1930-422; 1931-237; 1932-284
EMPR BULL *23, p. 99; *40, pp. 91,92
EMPR OF 1992-18, pp. 47,48
EMPR P 1993-23
GSC MAP 70A; 1553A
GSC MEM 13, pp. 63,197; 36, pp. 41-43,133,134; 96, p. 107
CANMET REPORT 452, Vol. 5, pp. 156,158,159; *811, Part 5, pp. 130-132,142
GAC FIELD TRIP GUIDEBOOK Trip 7 - Muller, J.E. (1977): Geology of Vancouver Island
Hudson, R. (1997): A Field Guide to Gold, Gemstone & Mineral Sites of British Columbia, Vol. 1: Vancouver Island, p. 64
Lockie, D.A. (1957): A Petrographic Analysis of Some Limestones of Southwestern British Columbia, University of British Columbia, Unpublished B.A. Thesis

COPYRIGHT | DISCLAIMER | PRIVACY | ACCESSIBILITY