Birchtree Mine

Birchtree Mine is an underground nickel mine, owned and operated by Vale Inco in the city of Thompson, Manitoba, Canada.[1] It lies in the nickel containing Thompson Belt, a geologic feature associated with the Circum-Superior Belt large igneous province throughout the Superior craton.

Birchtree Mine
Location
Birchtree Mine
Location in Manitoba
LocationThompson
ProvinceManitoba
CountryCanada
Coordinates55°42′06″N 097°55′37″W
Production
ProductsNickel
History
Opened1965
Active1965 - 1978
1988 -
Owner
CompanyVale Inco
WebsiteVale Inco

History

Birchtree mine originally opened in 1965 until 1978 when it was put in "standby" until 1988.[1] The mine reopened again in 1989. [2] In 2000 Inco authorized US$48 million [3] to deepen the mine to 4,100 feet (1,250 m), expanding production to 3,800 tons per day.[1] The Deepening Project allowed Inco to access ore between the 3950 level and 2300 level. In 2002[4] Birchtree Mine started producing ore from between 2750 level and 2300 level. In 2003 the first ore was extracted between 3950 level and 3450 level.

Safety

In 2005 Birchtree mine was the recipient of the John T. Ryan Trophy for having achieving the lowest accident frequency of all Canadian metal mines. In 2008 it received the regional John T. Ryan trophy for the Prairies & Northwest Territories.

Footnotes

  1. Hersey, Carolyn (November 2008). "Safety, above all else". CIM Magazine. Montreal, Quebec, Canada: CIM Magazine. 3 (7): 5140–43. ISSN 1718-4177.
  2. Canadian Mines Handbook 2003-2004. Toronto, Ontario: Business Information Group. 2003. p. 550. ISBN 0-919336-60-4.
  3. "Inco approves $48 million to deepen BT mine (select 2000s)". Archived from the original on 2007-06-01. Retrieved 2007-06-12.
  4. "BT Mine Shaft deepening". Archived from the original on 2007-09-30. Retrieved 2007-06-12.


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