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Ch. 13: Dominion of Canada

Ch. 13: Dominion of Canada Page of 364 Ch. 13: Dominion of Canada Text size:minus plus Restore normal size   Mail page  Print this page
UNITED STATES, CANADA AND MEXICO
267
the Museum of the Geological Survey of Canada at Ottawa and in the Peter Redpath Museum, McGill College, Montreal. These consist of both jade and pectolite articles, in the form of adzes, drill-points of borers, cut boulders, sockets for fire-drills, mallets, axes, pendants, and burnishers. Of the sixty-one objects found, seventeen show evidence more or less distinct of having been sawn from other pieces. Nordenskiold' describes figures and a broken harpoon-point of bone and nephrite, from Point Clarence, 650 north latitude, north of Norton Sound. Dr. Dawson says: "It is among the highly altered and decomposed rocks of the Carboniferous and Triassic that silicates of the jade class might be expected to occur, and I feel little doubt that when these rocks are carefully investigated they will be found to be the sources of the jade." The Indians of the region, however, have usually, if not invariably, obtained their supply from loose fragments and boulders. Jade is also reported from the Rae River and from the Hudson Bay district.
Axinite in fine crystals was reported by Dr. Bigsby from a boulder of primitive rock in Hawksbury, near Ottawa.
Epidote is found in many localities, though not in gem form, except when with flesh-colored feldspar in the amygdaloid trap on Lake Superior. This has been polished to form an odd orna­mental stone. At the falls of the Mingam River, Que., and in Ramsay Township, Ont., is found a peculiar, fine-grained, reddish gneiss, traversed by veins of a pea-green epidote. It is very beautiful when polished. Pale-green epidote with quartz is found on the Matane River. The epidote which forms mountain masses in the Shickshock Mountains, Que., is hard, susceptible of a high polish, and would be of value as an ornamental stone.
Amazonstone (microcline) has been found in Sebastopol, Ont., and in Hull, Que., in cleavages of good color.
Labradorite, the most beautiful of all the chatoyant feldspars, exists in great quantities on the coast of Labrador, especially at Nain, and on St. Paul's Island adjacent to it, where the finest known occurs in veins of some size, where for over a century it has been mined for use in the arts. It occurs on Lake Huron, Ont, at Cape Mahul, and at Abercombie, Que., also in cleavages
1 Voyage of the Vega, Vol. 2, 1882.
Ch. 13: Dominion of Canada Page of 364 Ch. 13: Dominion of Canada
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