Gold Rush: Stories of Big Mines and a Little Town Named Malartic Gold Rush; stories of big mines and a little town named Malartic Musée minéralogique de l'Abitibi-Témiscamingue
The Camflo Mine was located approximately 4 miles east of Malartic. The sinking of the well began in the summer of 1963. The subsequent underground development warranted the […]
00: 01 – 00: 10 Workers prepared the houses to move them from the southern district of the city of Malartic to the new district located a few […]
Aerial view of Malartic and the Canadian Malartic Mine pit in 2012.
Malartic mining camp past producers include: Canadian Malartic Gold Mines Limited; East Malartic Gold Mines Limited; Barnat-Sladen Mines Limited; Malartic Gold Fields Limited (not shown here).
First and Foremost The mineral fields of the Canadian Malartic Mine were first staked by John Mark in 1922. Located on the edge of the Cadillac Fault, who became […]
In 1932, Mr. James Paul Norrie and Mr. L.K. Coffin staked the land located half a kilometre from actual Malartic in the direction of Val d’Or. They began […]
Harsh Conditions The Sladen area was staked between 1923 and 1924 by B. Sladen and H. S. Kennedy and was located between East Malartic and Canadian Malartic about […]
An Abundant Deposit, A Prosperous Mine In 1934, W.B Crane and John Partanen, under the leadership of James Paul Norrie, staked on the Cadillac Fault’s extension, 10 km […]
Remembering the Missing Miners On October 1st, 2011, a memorial monument was dedicated to victims of the tragedy at the Musée minéralogique de l’Abitibi-Témiscamingue, located in Malartic. The […]
A Simple and Effective Style Originating in North America in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, the “boomtown” style is predominantly found in mining towns, which were […]
The ore to be refined starts off as a greyish mud received from the mill. It is placed in a pot and heated to more than 3000 degrees […]