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: 21-May-1986 by Eileen Van der Flier Keller (EVFK)
Last Edit:  29-Jul-2010 by Sarah Meredith-Jones (SMJ)

Summary Help Help

NMI 103F8 Col3
Name ANTHRACITE, FALLS CREEK, CAMP ANTHRACITE Mining Division Skeena
BCGS Map 103F039
Status Developed Prospect NTS Map 103F08E
Latitude 053º 19' 29'' UTM 08 (NAD 83)
Longitude 132º 13' 00'' Northing 5911825
Easting 685481
Commodities Coal Deposit Types A04 : Bituminous coal
A05 : Anthracite
Tectonic Belt Insular Terrane Wrangell
Capsule Geology

A single coal seam, equivalent to the seam mined at Camp Robertson (103F 013), occurs in the Anthracite Camp interbedded with sandstone and shale of the Cretaceous Queen Charlotte Group, Haida or Skidegate formations. The seam is 2.7 metres thick and contains 1.4 metres of coal in up to 6 bands of varying thickness. The coal is interspersed with shale and bone coal and the roof is a medium to fine-grained sandstone. The coal contains 1.52 to 5.69 per cent water, 7.59 to 8.69 per cent volatile matter, 42.10 to 80.07 per cent fixed carbon, and 9.72 to 44.38 per cent ash. A number of thin streaks and seams of coal occur in the sandstones and shales underlying the coal seam.

The structure consists of a large flat syncline (equivalent to the west syncline at Camp Robertson) which trends roughly north northwest. The coal bearing strata strike north-northwest and dip approximately 85 degrees southwest on the east limb of the syncline. The high dips are local and probably due to faulting. A northwest trending dip-slip fault separates Queen Charlotte sediments from Middle Jurassic volcanics and sediments of the Yakoun Group immediately northeast of the deposit (GSC Open File 2319).

The strata are intruded by various sills and dikes.

The prospect, located on Anthracite creek, was discovered in 1898.

The opening is an adit on the right bank of the creek driven for 14 metres across the measures which strike north 32 degrees west, and dip 85 degrees southwest. A drift, 3.6 metres from the opening, goes 9 metres southeast in the seam.

A preliminary estimated of probable mineable reserves by Mackay for the Royal Commission on Coal, in 1946, was 4,064,000 tonnes.

Bibliography
EMPR AR 1898-971,1163; 1902-56; 1903-210; 1906-85; *1914-165-171; 1915-75; 1916-88
EMPR BULL 54, p. 177
EMPR COAL ASS RPT *93
GSC ANN RPT 1904, Pt.B (Vol. 16), pp. 44
GSC MAP 1385A; 5-1990
GSC MEM *69, pp. 141-158; *88, pp. 17, 136-140
GSC OF 2319
GSC P 86-20; 88-1E, pp. 221-227; 89-1H; 90-10, pp. 253-277, 279-294; 91-1A, pp. 367-371
GSC SUM RPT *1912, pp. 12-40
Report on the Royal Commission on Coal, pp. 51, 641, Ottawa, 1946
EMPR PFD 17118, 508386

COPYRIGHT | DISCLAIMER | PRIVACY | ACCESSIBILITY