Official Name: | Moose River Gold Mines |
Pushpin Map: | Canada Nova Scotia |
Pushpin Map Caption: | Location within Nova Scotia |
Coordinates: | 44.9842°N -62.9428°W |
Subdivision Type: | Country |
Subdivision Name: | Canada |
Subdivision Type1: | Province |
Subdivision Name1: | Nova Scotia |
Subdivision Type2: | Municipality |
Subdivision Name2: | Halifax Regional Municipality |
Leader Title: | Governing Council |
Leader Name: | Halifax Regional Council |
Timezone: | AST |
Utc Offset: | −4 |
Timezone Dst: | ADT |
Utc Offset Dst: | −3 |
Footnotes: | Part of a series about Places in Nova Scotia |
Moose River Gold Mines is a Canadian rural community located in Nova Scotia's Halifax Regional Municipality.[1] It is at the junction of Moose River Road and Mooseland Road. No numbered highways run through Moose River Gold Mines. Gold was discovered in the area in 1866 and mining started in the 1870s. Interest waned around 1900 but rose in the 1930s. The community gained international attention in 1936 when three men were trapped in the mine.
See also: Gold mining in Nova Scotia. Gold was first discovered in the area in 1866, but no mining took place until the 1870s when the area became known as the Moose River Gold District. Interest waned in the early 1900s but resumed in the 1930s and the mine was brought back into production in 1935.[2] These historic workings produced some 26000ozt of gold, which was largely taken from quartz veins, but some also from open slate quarries.[3]
On April 12, 1936, the roof of the mine collapsed, trapping three men, Herman Magill, David Robertson, and Alfred Scadding,[4] down for 11 days. The men were reached by drilling a borehole on the sixth day to bring food, water and a telephone until the rescue was completed. Robertson and Scadding survived and Magill died on the seventh day. The event was broadcast by J. Frank Willis of the Canadian Radio Broadcasting Commission (CRBC) to more than 650 radio stations throughout North America over the course of fifty-six hours, and was picked up by the BBC and broadcast to Europe.[5] [6] It was the first live 24-hour radio coverage of a breaking news story in Canada.
The following year a Hollywood movie, Draegerman Courage, was made about the events in Moose River and cave-in at the mine, trapping three men. The 'Draegerman' that the title refers to is a man whose job it is to clean up cave-ins in mines and rescue the survivors.[7]
Today, there is a provincial park with a cairn and there was a plaque where the borehole was drilled, and there is a museum portraying the history of the gold mine.[8] The plaque was stolen sometime before June 28, 2006. It has yet to be recovered.
In the 1980s, drilling exploration in the area of the earlier slate workings found significant gold deposits in what became known as the Touquoy zone, after a former mine owned by Damas Touquoy.[9] DDV Gold Ltd. applied to operate an open pit gold mine in 2007. Deposits at the project named Touquoy hold an estimated 635000ozt of gold, worth $700 million in 2012.[10] The surface operation will involve drilling, blasting, and gold cyanidation to process the ore.[11] The Moose River Gold Mines site will also process ore from the company's mine at its Beaver Dam deposit, 37 km away, which has an estimated yield of 426600ozt.[12] This will save the construction of a second tailings pond, and an old bush road will be upgraded to facilitate transport. The Moose River mine will have a life of five years and Beaver Dam just three.[13] There are more deposits at Cochrane Hill and Fifteen Mile Stream, 57 km away.[14]
Despite the controversy of land expropriation,[15] production is expected to begin in 2015 or 2016.[16]