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MINERAL POTENTIAL INDIAN RESERVE LANDS

QUEBEC REGION


  1. DESCRIPTION
  2. THE INVENTORY
    1. 2.1 THE QUEBEC REPORT
      2.2 THE LAND BASE IN QUEBEC
  3. THE REGIONAL MINERAL INVENTORY ANALYSIS
    1. 3.1 OVERALL RATING
      3.2 COMMODITY RATINGS WITH POTENTIAL
      3.3 RESERVES AT THE EXPLORATION PHASE
      3.4 RESERVES AT THE DEVELOPMENT PHASE
      3.5 RESERVES AT THE PRODUCTION PHASE
  4. MINERAL SURRENDERS
  5. MINERAL PERMITS AND LEASES
  6. RELATIONSHIP WITH PRINCIPLE MINES


1.0 DESCRIPTION

The purpose of this regional summary is to provide managers and staff with an analysis of the data contained in the mineral inventory to assist in the preparation and planning for the response of Indian Bands resulting from the distribution of the report.

2.0 THE INVENTORY

The inventory is a report that comprises forty-five volumes including approximately 18,000 pages and 10,000 maps. It is entitled "Mineral Potential Indian Reserve Lands" and has been completed at the Stage I (Literature Search) level for each Indian reserve in Canada. The Stage I inventory is defined as a review and record of all available material on the geology, geophysics, geochemistry, economic geology, and past or existing mineral operations of a reserve and its surrounding area. The minerals under discussion are grouped under five main headings: metallic, non-metallic (industrial), aggregate (sand and gravel), groundwater and peat.

2.1 THE QUEBEC REPORT

The Mineral Potential of Indian Reserves Lands for the province of Quebec comprises 2 volumes and approximately 300 pages with 150 maps. This part of the report was completed in March, 1989.

2.2 THE LAND BASE IN QUEBEC

The Mineral Potential of Indian Reserve Lands, Saskatchewan incorporates 143 Indian reserves.

The total land base of these 143 reserves is approximately 618,815.9 hectares or approximately one percent of the land area of the province of Saskatchewan.

The average area of Indian reserves in the Region is 4313 hectares. This figure is substantially higher than the national average of 1176 hectares (2907 acres) per reserve. Frequently, the area of a reserve is a significant factor in the evaluation of its overall mineral potential.

3.0 THE REGIONAL MINERAL INVENTORY ANALYSIS

For every reserve contained in the inventory, a computer data record sheet was prepared which captured up to 51 descriptive items of information directly from the text of the inventory itself. This systematic process enables detailed, highly accurate and varied calculations and statistical analyses to be carried out on the minerals and related activities on reserves and create summaries on a Band, Regional or national basis.

The following represents a summary of the pertinent information necessary and useful for evaluating the current Indian mineral resource environment of the Quebec Region:

3.1 OVERALL RATINGS

The overall rating measures the economic mineral possibilities of each reserve as a whole, on low-moderate-good scale (1 - 3). Factors which affect this rating are: size of the reserve; location with respect to markets, transportation, access, value and type of commodity; social and cultural barriers to mining on certain lands and areas; marketability of a commodity at any given time, etc.

A moderate rating implies that some indications of mineral potential are present. More work on such reserves is necessary to gather technical information to determine whether a specific reserve can be rated at a higher or lower level.

The reserves have been rated for mineral resource potential as follows:

Overall Rating No. of reserves
Low 19
Moderate 9
Good 3

3.2 COMMODITY RATINGS WITH POTENTIAL

The inventory catalogues a total of 79 mineral occurrences on reserves in Quebec from all five commodity or mineral types (metallic, non-metallic, aggregate, peat and water) and draws from a list of nearly 120 different minerals and commodities.

Commodity rating is an evaluation, on a clearly defined scale from one to five, of the potential of a mineral or commodity for development in terms of its geology, type, location, marketability, etc, based on the available information. This estimate is based on data collected from many sources and considers the geological surroundings of the reserves. For this reason, a known mineral occurrence on a reserve may have no value and be given a low rating, and conversely a commodity may be rated very high based on an indication of a deposit off-reserve which may extend onto reserve lands.

In order to gauge more accurately the opportunities in minerals and filter out those reserves which are considered to have low potential (at this time and given the available information), the following analysis examines those reserves with commodities rated at 3, 4 or 5 on the scale of one to five (where one is very low potential and 5 is very high):

  • The number of reserves possessing at least one commodity, rated at 3 or greater, is 8. These 8 reserves share a total of 16 commodity occurrences.

  • Of the 16 occurrences, 3 (19%) are metallic minerals; 13 (81%) are non-metallic, aggregate, or other minerals/mineral types.

3.3 RESERVES AT THE EXPLORATION PHASE

This phase groups the myriad activities which are necessary in the detection, evaluation and measurement of deposits of minerals.

The mineral inventory report is the equivalent of Exploration Phase Stage I (literature search), which has been completed. The number of reserves in the Region which have undergone some form of subsequent exploration activity beyond Stage I is:

  Metallic Non-metallic Aggregate Peat Water
Stage II 2 1 2 1 7
Stage III 2 1 2 0 7
Stage IV 0 0 0 0 0
Stage V 0 0 0 0 0

3.4 RESERVES AT THE DEVELOPMENT PHASE

This phase is the step in the progression between exploration and production for a specific mineral or group of minerals where the land and the mineral deposit is prepared for the actual mining operations. This activity may range from tree cutting, fencing, and stripping of topsoil to detailed drilling programs, shaft and adit sinking, open pit excavations, etc.

Many reserves have experienced some form of development work related to their mineral resources. Some of those have been proven to have little or no mineral potential as a result of information derived from such work, or work was discontinued due to outside influences such as company failures or dropping markets.

The number of reserves deemed to have had some activity at the development phase is as follows:

Development Phase Reserves
Metallic 0
Non-metallic 1
Aggregate 0
Peat 0
Water 0

3.5 RESERVES AT THE PRODUCTION PHASE

Production phase as used here is the actual extraction of material or mineral by any mining process, past or present, which is stockpiled, used on or sold off-reserve.

The number of reserves at the production phase is listed below. These figures consider any form of extraction of minerals for sale on or off reserve and includes cases of production of materials with a low commodity rating. It is noteworthy that many hundreds of small gravel pits exist on reserves which are unknown to the Department and are not included in this database.

Production Phase Reserve
Metallic 0
Non-metallic 0
Aggregate 2
Peat 0
Water 1

4.0 MINERAL SURRENDERS

An examination of the records indicates that no reserves considered here in the Quebec Region have surrendered their minerals in any way. This situation results directly from the complex mineral rights and ownership issues relating to provincial legislation and the way in which each reserve was established. Only a very few reserves in Canada have had a recent, specific mineral surrender for the purposes of mineral development.

5.0 MINERAL PERMITS AND LEASES

Indian Lands Registry of Lands, Revenues and Trusts have recorded only one occurrence of a mineral related permit, lease and/or agreement since Confederation. This single entry in the registry did not specify the nature of the specific commodities.

Although only one entry is recorded in the Registry, many operations past and present are known to exist in the province without benefit of a duly registered permit.

For Canada as a whole, 459 entries of permits, leases and/or agreements were recorded in the Registry. Averaged on a national basis, 72% of mineral agreements are undertaken by the private sector, next comes provincial government at 14%, municipalities at 6%, bands at 3%, and federal organizations participated in only 1% of agreements. Three percent of the total number of registry entries were undetermined.

6.0 RELATIONSHIP WITH PRINCIPLE MINES

Of the reserves in Quebec, three is situated within 10 kilometres of the nearly 50 principle industrial mineral and metallic mineral mines in the province.

Approximately 12 reserves (39%) are situated within 50 kilometres (an easy commuting distance) of the 50 or so principle industrial mineral and metallic mineral mines in the province. These mines employ on national average 479 workers for a total of over 24,000 jobs. Statistics suggest nearly 670 of these jobs should be held by Natives.

October 1991

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  Last Updated: 2004-04-23 top of page Important Notices