Sunday, 18 November 2012

An Iron Ore Deposit in the Potsdam Sandstone of Eastern Ontario: The Hematite Deposit Between Delta and Furnace Falls

An early report that describes the rocks of Lanark County is the Report on the Geology of a Portion of Eastern Ontario by R.W. Ells that was published in 1904 by the Geological Survey of Canada. The report covers the northern three quarters of Lanark County and covers adjacent parts of Renfrew, Addington, Frontenac and Carleton counties. In his report Ells traces the Potsdam sandstones from Renfrew down to south of Perth. One part in the report that caught my eye included comments on iron ore deposits in the Potsdam sandstones. Ells commented:
"While the sandstones as a rule are grayish or sometimes yellowish; in places they are often coloured red through the presence of hematite. This sometimes assumes the form of ore deposits of this mineral, capable of being mined. These deposits are usually in the form of irregular pockets and vary in quality from the impregnated sandstones, in which the siliceous matter predominates to an iron ore of considerable purity."I found that intriguing because, while I am aware of numerous former iron ore mines in the Precambrian Shield of Eastern Ontario, I could not recall anyone mining iron ore in Potsdam sandstone. Unfortunately, the map that accompanied Ells’ report does not show the location of the hematite deposits.

I decided to do further research on the matter and started by trying to determine the source for the iron ore that had been smelted at Furnace Falls, Ontario. I chose this location because Furnace Falls, which is now known as Lyndhurst, is the location for Ontario’s first iron ore smelter and because directly to the north of Lyndhurst (and south of Delta, Ontario) are many dark red beds of Potsdam sandstone (and it is known that the red colouring of the sandstone is due to iron oxide). Lyndhurst is located about 25 kilometers south of Lanark County in the United Counties of Leeds and Grenville. I struck gold (or, more accurately, iron), as the hematite that was smelted at Furnace Falls was mined from Potsdam sandstone beds approximately five kilometers (three miles) north of Lyndhurst (and one kilometer south of Delta, Ontario).

An historical plaque on a rock cairn in Lyndhurst provides a brief history of the smelter.

The plaque states:
"Lansdowne Iron Works
Forges Lansdowne
While the existence of local ore was well known and various petitions had been made to erect a foundry, it was not until 1801 that Wallis Sunderlin, a Vermont founderer, established the first iron works in Upper Canada at Furnace Falls. The works, which included both a furnace for the production of cast iron and a forge for the manufacture of wrought iron, were operated with limited success by Sunderlin and his associates until destroyed by fire in 1811. Attempts in 1815-16 to re-establish the works to supply the Kingston dockyard were ended with the agreement to limit armaments on the Great Lakes."

A newsletter published in 2004 by the Leeds and Thousand Islands Historical Society provides additional information on the iron smelter: "By 1795, it was known that the big falls on the Gananoque river had all the resources needed to develop an iron smelter. Wallis Sunderlin, an ironmaster from Tinmouth, Vermont, received assent from the Executive Council in 1800. The Lansdowne Iron Works was completed in 1802 being the first in Upper Canada. Sunderlin was granted 1200 acres to supply fuel for the blast furnace. The Furnace produced domestic cast iron items, pig iron, and wrought iron. ... In 1811 the smelter and mill complex was destroyed by fire. Sunderlin died that year and his family moved back to the United States... With the outbreak of war in 1812 no effort was made to rebuild the furnace."

A number of publications of the Geological Survey of Canada and the Ontario Department of Mines confirm that the iron ore that was smelted at Furnace Falls came from hematite deposits in Potsdam sandstone mined from Lot 25 (and possibly Lot 24) in the tenth concession of Bastard Township (near the township line with Lansdowne township), between Delta and Furnace Falls.  Murray (1852) of the Geological Survey of Canada provides an early description of the ore deposit:

"The cliff of ferruginous sandstone, which occurs on the twenty-fifth lot of the tenth concession of Bastard, displaying a vertical height of about thirty feet, brown in the lower and deep red in the upper part, owes its color to the presence of peroxide of iron, which is mingled with the siliceous grains, apparently cementing them together, and sometimes being pulverent, staining the fingers with a red shining powder. In a three feet bed, which occurs within about three feet of the top, the oxide passes into the form of strongly coherent scaly red iron ore, in which thin seams and spangles of crystalline specular iron ore occur. The parts so marked run in layers in the bed, and alternate with layers of the sandstone of a yellow and less ferruginous character. The concentration of the ore is greatest towards the middle of the bed, where nodules and patches of pure red hematite, running with the stratification, occur at intervals of a few inches, the thickness they display not exceeding a couple of inches. About forty years since an attempt was made to mine the ore for the supply of a furnace erected at Furnace Falls, but the quantity in the locality worked was not sufficient to give a profitable result."

From Murray’s description it would appear that there is a well defined stratigraphic control for the ore body and, accordingly, that the iron deposit is the same age as the host sandstone.

The deposit appears to have been fairly extensive. Murray mentions that the cliff in Lot 25 extends into Lot 24, that similar rocks that contain small seams, patches and streaks of specular iron can be found in Lot 23 of Concession X of Bastard Township, in the adjacent ninth lot of the twelfth concession of Lansdowne Township and in the 9th Concession of Lansdowne Township.

A little over a century after the smelter at Furnace Falls was destroyed the hematite deposit was tested for ore. The Ontario Department of Mines, and J.F. Wright of the Geological Survey of Canada, provide details of the testing of the property. Wright (1921) comments:
"From October 1918 Drainey Brothers of Toronto worked these deposits, except in winter, until November 1919. In August 1919 the Consolidated Iron and Steel Corporation took over the property. Three small shafts and some prospect pits were sunk and four carloads of ore were shipped, which according to the smelter records, averaged 68 per cent iron. About one carload of ore was left on the dump." The Ontario Department of Mines’ Twenty-ninth Annual Report (1920) mentions that The Consolidated Iron and Steel Corporation, Limited "had an option on some 600 acres in Leeds County about half way between Delta and Lyndhurst Stations on the Brockville and Westport railway in concession X of the township of Bastard and the adjoining portions of the township of Lansdowne." However, nothing appears to have come of Consolidated Iron’s testing of the deposit in 1919 and the shipment of four railroad cars of hematite. Four years later when M. B. Baker (1923) reported on the geology of Leeds County for the Ontario Department of Mines he commented that "a number of pits were opened up, but shipping ore was not found in any appreciable tonnage."

Wright (1921) provided a map of the deposit (see below) and additional details on the deposit, which he placed in Lot 23, Concession X, Bastard Township.


Shaft No. 1 (16 feet). The ore occurred in irregular shaped pockets. The ore is either massive hematite mixed with specular hematite, siderite and calcite or sandstone impregnated with hematite.

Shaft No. 2 (20 feet). The ore occurs along a fracture zone along which the sandstone is impregnated with hematite, and as veins of hematite, from 1 to 2 inches wide.

Shaft No. 3 (15 feet) . The ore body consists of two irregularly shaped veins of massive hematite from 3 to 6 inches wide.

Wright proposed the following origin for the ore: "The iron minerals appear to be due to solutions circulating along joint planes or fracture zones in the sandstone. The most likely source for the ore minerals is the weathering of overlying sedimentary formations containing iron, probably in the form of carbonate. ... The iron was probably carried down as ferrous carbonate and after or during precipitation was oxidized to the ferric oxide hematite. The solutions filled all the open spaces, spread into the sandstone, and replaced the calcareous cement but only slightly the quartz."

I mentioned above that Murray (1852) described a well defined stratigraphic control for the ore body–an ore zone that is a three foot bed three feet from the top of a 30 foot cliff of sandstone– and stated that the hematite runs with the stratification, alternating with layers of the sandstone. Wright’s (1921) description of the deposit (namely that the ore occurs in veins, fracture zones and pockets), and his suggestion for its origin, are at odds with Murray’s (1852) description. It is hard to reconcile Murray’s stratabound description for the ore zone with Wright’s description. It possible that Murray was describing different aspects of the deposit than Wright . Murray’s description was for Lot 25 while Wright described a deposit in Lot 23. It is also possible that the good stratabound ore that was present when Murray looked at the deposit had been mined out by the time that Wright looked at the deposit.

Those interested in locating the original ore deposit should consult the Geological Survey of Canada’s Map 1182A, Geology Westport Ontario, which can be downloaded free of charge over the internet from the GSC. An extract from the map is provided below.  Hematite occurrences in sandstone in Lot 25, Concession IX of Bastard Township are shown on the extract by "x hem".


I drove down to Delta and briefly looked for the deposit, but as it was deer hunting season did not venture into the woods. I did find an outcrop of massive hematite and  rock impregnated with hematite southeast of Delta (and within a kilometer of the original deposit)  in an area that is mapped as Potsdam Group sandstone by both the Geological Survey of Canada and the Ontario Geological Survey. However, the outcrop is too badly altered to hematite to positively identify it as sandstone. A photograph of the outcrop and a photograph of three specimens of hematite from the outcrop are shown below.   The outcrop consists of both (1) massive hematite mixed with specular hematite and (2) host rock impregnated with hematite.



The outcrop is on both sides of County Road 42 a kilometer southeast of Delta, about 50 meters before the Hicock Road turn off to Lyndhurst. It is possibly altered Covey Hill sandstone and conglomerate (the lower part of the Potsdam Group). Twenty meters closer to Hicock Road , and at a higher elevation, is an outcrop of that is obviously sandstone (possibly Nepean Sandstone - the upper part of the Potsdam Group). The outcrops can be seen in Google Street View. I assumed there was an unconformity between the hematite bearing beds and the beds that are possibly Nepean sandstone, but didn't look for it.

Addendum (January 25, 2022): Ken Watson and Art Shaw have researched the sources for iron ore smelted at Furnace Falls. It appears the Murray (1852) was wrong and that I was wrong, as the deposit just south of Delta, and east of Lower Beverley Lake, was discovered after the smelter at Furnace Falls ceased operations.  This is set out in detail in my January 25, 2022 blog posting.  Worth reading are the recent articles by Art Shaw and Ken Watson that are posted on  the web site for the Old Stone Mill at Delta, Ontario, and Lieutenant  Baddeley's (1831) report on the Lower Beverley Lake Deposit found in ‘An Essay on the localities of Metallic Minerals in the Canadas, with some  notices of their Geological associations and situations etc.’ published in the  Transactions of the Literary & Historical Society of Quebec, volume 2, 332- 426  at pages  336-7, 347, 383- 386  https://archive.org/details/transactionsofli02lite/page/332/mode/2up


Christopher P. Brett
Perth, Ontario

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1 comment:

  1. I grew up on Hicock Road, and work in mining field now. Interesting to know that rock outcrop you found contains so much iron ore! Next time you get out that way, you have only to travel down the township line (trail head about 200m south on Hicock Road from the rock outcrop), and then walk 30 minutes west along the trail. Should find a large pit, then more minor pits continuing a bit west. Another route in is visible in Google satellite view, where the "road to Lyndhurst" in Wright's 1921 map is visible heading to the pits, with its entrance from Lyndhurst road visible just north of where the old Westport-Brockville train track intersects with Lyndhurst Road.

    I really want to go back now and find that carload of ore!

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