Last edited by Dalkis
Friday, July 24, 2020 | History

2 edition of Bituminous sands of northern Alberta found in the catalog.

Bituminous sands of northern Alberta

Canada. Mines Branch (1901-1936)

Bituminous sands of northern Alberta

by Canada. Mines Branch (1901-1936)

  • 367 Want to read
  • 3 Currently reading

Published by F. A. Acland, Printer to the King in Ottawa .
Written in

    Places:
  • Alberta, Northern.
    • Subjects:
    • Oil sands -- Alberta, Northern.,
    • Mines and mineral resources -- Alberta, Northern.

    • Edition Notes

      Statementby Sidney C. Ells.
      ContributionsElls, Sidney Clarke, 1879-
      Classifications
      LC ClassificationsTN850 .C3 1924
      The Physical Object
      Pagination35 p.
      Number of Pages35
      ID Numbers
      Open LibraryOL6672206M
      LC Control Number24030303
      OCLC/WorldCa1516064

      Rebecca Ryall. "Producers defend oil sands emissions." National Post. December 17th, "back home, the oil industry and the government of Alberta are fighting back against suggestions that oil from northern Alberta is exponentially worse for the planet than the conventional stuff pulled from places like the U.S. gulf coast and Saudi Arabia. The tar sand project in Alberta is the largest industrial project in human history. The tar sands in Alberta are one of the biggest reservoirs and producers of oil in the world. The oil sands in Alberta contains more than billion barrels of oil, which is enough to sustain Canada 's oil demand for over years.

      Winner of the prestigious Rachel Carson Environment Book Award. "Andrew Nikiforuk's Tar Sands is, in essence, a revolting, blush-making case for Canada to develop integrated energy and environmental regulation suitable for the post-carbon age."--Globe & Mail Newly updated, Andrew Nikiforuk's Tar Sands is a critical exposé of the world's largest energy project--the 1/5(2). 5% of Canada’s total wealth. The existence of the oil sands in Northern Alberta has been common knowledge for a very long time. For hundreds of years, Indigenous peoples who lived in the region of the Athabasca and Clearwater rivers used the bitumen from these sands to repair their : Shane Roberts.

        Tar Wars: Oil, Environment and Alberta’s Image by Geo Takach; reviewed by Rob Norris. MENU. SUBSCRIBE. Book Reviews. a book by Alberta’s late premier Jim Prentice and professor Jean-Sébastien Rioux: he posits that the scale of Alberta’s “bit-sands,” or bituminous sands, and associated industrial developments serves as “an. The composition and the rates of evolution of light gases and volatile materials from Athabasca and Cold Lake oil sand bitumen and their separated fractions have been described as a function of temperature. From the estimation of the Arrhenius parameters for product formation, it was concluded that.


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Bituminous sands of northern Alberta by Canada. Mines Branch (1901-1936) Download PDF EPUB FB2

Additional Physical Format: Online version: Canada. Mines Branch (). Bituminous sands of northern Alberta. Ottawa, F.A. Acland, Printer to the King, Bituminous sands of northern Alberta, [Sidney Clarke, Canada.

Ells] on *FREE* shipping on qualifying : Canada. Ells, Sidney Clarke. Get this from a library. Bituminous sands of northern Alberta: occurrence and economic possibilities. [Sidney Clarke Ells; Canada. Mines Branch ()]. Oil sands, tar sands, crude bitumen, or more technically bituminous sands, are a type of unconventional petroleum sands are either loose sands or partially consolidated sandstone containing a naturally occurring mixture of sand, clay, and water, soaked with a dense and extremely viscous form of petroleum technically referred to as bitumen.

Preliminary Report on the Bituminous Sands of Northern Alberta [S. Ellis] on *FREE* shipping on qualifying : S. Ellis. Trace metals in soils of the bituminous sands mining region of Alberta: a critical, geochemical perspective of the study (). Critical Comment on the paper by C. Boutin and D.J.

Carpenter () entitled“Assessment of wetland/upland vegetation Bituminous sands of northern Alberta book and evaluation of soil‐plant contamination by polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and.

Cover of Sidney Blair’s Report on the Alberta Bituminous Sands commissioned by the Government of Alberta, Source: Provincial Archives of Alberta, PRbox Athabasca Oil Sands Conference establishes an Alberta oil sands policy and stimulates commercial interest in the resource. Alberta’s oil sands underlie aboutkm2 of the Athabasca, Cold Lake and Peace river areas in northern Alberta.

Up to 80 % of this deposit is buried too deeply to be recoverable by. Friday, June 2, IECA founding member (and recently elected board member) Geo Takach has published Tar Wars: Oil, Environment and Alberta's Image (University of Alberta Press, ). The book offers an insider's look at how visual environmental communication both reflects and shapes how we negotiate the development of the Earth's precious natural.

Water Permeability of Reservoir Sands (Reprint from: American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers / A.I.M.E. / AIME, volumes and ). by Johnston, Norris. and a great selection of related books, art and collectibles available now at Preliminary report on the bituminous sands of northern Alberta, (Ottawa: Government printing bureau, ), by Canada.

Mines Branch and S. Ells (page images at HathiTrust; US access only) Lime, mortar, & cement: their characteristics and analyses. oil sand Oil sands are sand grains coated by water and clay, with bitumen, an especially heavy, viscous crude oil, filling intervening pore spaces.

Oil sands are found in 16 major deposits around the world, the two greatest being Canada’s Athabasca deposit and Venezuela’s Orinoco deposit. The Athabasca deposit is in the province of Alberta, and with the. Leading US newspapers have suddenly turned their attention to the energy-security prospects locked in northern Alberta's billion bbl of recoverable bitumen reserves.

A similar term appears as "bituminous sands" in reference to western Canadian petroleum in the Athabasca region in a publication (Ells, S.C., Summary report on bituminous sands of northern Alberta, Canadian Mines Bureau Summary Report of ).

"Bituminous sands" appears to be used interchangeably or as a substitute for. InAlberta's conventional crude reserves totaled about billion barrels, roughly one-third of Canada's total. To put that into perspective, it's less than half of what's contained in the now-famous Bakken oil formation.

Last year, Alberta's conventional production was a little more thanbarrels per : Keith Kohl. Use of the bituminous sand as a source of petroleum products, particularly gasoline, was regarded as a remote pos- 48 The History of Alberta Oil EARLIER OPERATIONS IN REMOVING OVERBURDEN FROM BITUMINOUS SAND, NORTHERN ALBERTA Bituminous Sands of Northern Alberta 49 •sibility.

If current expansion plans are executed, oil sands production will top 3 mbd by What's important here is the formation: how close the oil is to the surface. Overacres of Northern Alberta is currently undergoing surface mining.

To do that, the oil has to be less than 75 meters underground. Oil sands are actually found all over the world, and are sometimes referred to as tar sands or bituminous sands. A typical oil sands deposit in Alberta contains on average about 10% bitumen, 5% water and 85% solids, mostly in the form of coarse silica sand.

Oil sands also contain fine solids and clays, typically in the range of 10 to 30% by weight. The Athabasca bituminous sands, Canada's largest petroleum reserve, lie in northern Alberta where they outcrop along the headwaters of the Athabasca river.

The accessibility that makes it possible to exploit the formation by mining also permits study of the interrelationships of the asphaltic oil, reservoir materials, and the geochemically Cited by: 7.

Analysis Of The Book ' The Sands Of Time ' Words | 3 Pages. Uno” for oil to the United States: not to mention, each and every oil company has occupancy in the Alberta tar sands.

Northern Alberta’s bituminous sands are the globes last great remaining oil field; these tar sands will (if Canada can’t reconstruct. Read More. The oil sands deposits in northern Alberta under square kilometres of mostly boreal forest. Collectively, they contain about trillion barrels of bitumen – dwarfing the oil reserves of the Middle East.

One deposit alone, the Athabasca, is the .Sidney Martin Blair was born in Parry Sound, Ontario, on Decemthe youngest of the five children of Frederick and Mary Ann Blair.

"An Investigation of the Bitumen Constituent of the Bituminous Sands of Northern Alberta," was accepted inafter which he was a research engineer with the Scientific and Industrial Research.A chemical investigation of the bitumen in the bituminous sands of Northern Alberta.

by Seyer, William Frederick,author University of Alberta - Theses and Dissertations. University of Alberta - Theses and Dissertations. Created on. September 22