EPISODE 93 PARADISE LODGE … MILE 71 ON THE ALGOMA CENTRAL RAILWAY (How does Paradise Lodge fit into the universe as we know it?

EPISODE  93   PARADISE LDOGE…MILE 71 ON  THE ALGOMA  CENTRAL RAILWAY


(How does Paradise Lodge fit into the universe as we know it?)

alan skeoch
August 2020


PARADISE LODGE…MILE 71 ON THE ALGOMA CENTRAL RAILWAY

My job was to get the numbers.  As har as thinking was concerned I was  not expected to do  much.  Best to keep my
head as  thick as  this piece of rough sawn timber.  Just being an instrument man was  tough enough.  Most people
would refuse to do the work.  Why?   Afraid  of losing so  much  blood  to carnivorous insects that tore flesh or shoved 
stiletto needles and sucked blood.


MARJORIE:  ON OUR DECISION TO GO TO PARADISE LDOGE, MILE 71, ACR.

“ALAN, don’t you think it’s strange that so much  of your time in the mining game was  centred
on the Canadian  Shield.?

“Never thought too much about it really…took it for granted.   I was never encouraged
to consider the big picture. ” Just do your job…get the readings.”Mining companies are secretive.
In nearly all jobs Our contractors did  not want many people to know what we were doing..”

“Why is that?”

“Money had a lot to do with the secrecy.  Big blocks  of land were staked as mining claims but
never big enough.  “Suppose  we claimed  the wrong place and  some other son of a bitch
knew about our work and  snapped  up the good  claims.”   If too much  was said about our work, then other mining promoters  would
flood the area with claims.  So we were never told much  about our clients.  
Most clients were honest even if  secretive.  At the same time there have always been
A lot of  shady  
characters boosting worthless mining stock…sucking in the greedy people of this world.

When I was a 17 year old high school student, I did  a job  in the Chibougamau region of Northern Quebec that taught me much
about the shady side of  mining exploration.   My  role was minor on the job…basically to 
help portage and  row a  rowboat through a series  of lakes “to check  out a vein of
chalcopyrite for a mining company”.  It took us  two days  to get there and two days get back 
to Chibougamau.   Maybe a week.  No communication with anyone.  Secret.  While we 
were rowing in the shallows and then we had  a small outboard fising engine for the deep  water.. ..”

“Rowing?   Why didn’t you use a canoe?”

“No canoes  were available or so we were told.   So  we rowed this ungainly towboat
and  carried it across portages.  Carrying a rowboat over rocks, tree roots, and through 
tag alder swamps was  not pleasant.”

“Why did they send you, Alan?  Were you special?”

“Just for brute labour.  The real important person was  Dr. Wilson,an elderly geologist. .
A really nice man who had been  asked  to give his opinion on a recently discovered
vein of chalcopyrite.  Asked to do so by  a  small  mine company.”
(I have a  picture of Dr. Wilson in our motor boat but have not found it yet)

“What did you find?”

“Oh, we found lots of chunks of Chalcopyrite.  The mine promoters had  spread  lots  of 
the stuff around.  They brought the lumps into the site from somewhere else.  The term
for that  is “seeding the site’.
 They had blasted the  vein all to hell.   Just a  smoke  screen.  The vein was a worthless
vein of  pyrite.  The blasting was designed to indicate seriousness.  To fool investors.
 Dr. Wilson did  not spend  much
time on the site. however.  He knew  what was  happening. “This place has been  seeded.
The chunks  of chalcopyrite have been brought in…the vein is  pyrite…no copper.
We are heading back right away.”

He was angry.  He had  been duped for he was an  honest man.  The owners  of the claims
were crooks.  There was no potential mine.  But they could  make big money by noting
in an advertisement in the Northern Miner that “at team  with a noted geologist has  been sent in to check
out the value of  our claim, etc.etc.… whatever.”   The mining stock  they issued would
go up in value.  Speculaitors wanting to get rich quick bought the stock…ordinary people
often who  knew nothing about mining.  Pharmacists like your grandfather from Lindsay.
Remember all the mining stock you inherited.  Worthless.  The shady promoters would  Fools would buy it.  The stock would  go up  in value.  
When the promotor thought it was close to a peak, the promoter would  sell and  make a  bundle.  Let’s say the stock sold
at 20 cents  a share…and then shot up to $2 a share.  One hell of a profit possible.

“What happened when you got back to Chibougamau?”


CHALCOPYRITE…COPPER ORE…GOOD 

“Dr. WILSON told the truth.  “All  we could find was a vein of worthless pyrite”
And the stock would plummet.  Investors would lose their shirts  The promoters
would walk away with the money.”

“Isn’t that illegal?”

“Reckon so.”

“What did you do?”

“I brought out a big chunk of the pyrite vein.  it’s around  the  garden somewhere.  
Can’t remember where.    Bottom line, I did nothing..  What was I supposed to do?
My job  was  pure and  simple.  I rowed the boat in and  I rowed the boat out.”

“Couldn’t you call the police?”

“Never occurred to me.   One thing  I did learn though.:

“What was that?”

“Not to buy mining stock.  I never knew what was  good  and what was bad.
Many of our customers preferred us to know as little as possible about
what we were doing.”

“Do you mean  you spent nine years of your life checking mining claims but
never knew whether they were worth anything?”

“That’s about right.  I was a simple cog in the machine.  Bottom of the 
pyramid.  Not expected  to think much.  “Just get the data, Alan, nothing
more.  We will do the interpretation.”

THE BIG  PICTURE AS I SEE IT.





Image shows a screenshot of the Mid-Continent Rift Story Map



Lately, I have been thinking about what I did  for those nine years.  The big picture.  
And  I am bowled over.  What I spent nine  years (maybe ten  years) doing was 
linked to the origins of planet earth.   Our big  ball whirling around  the sun is a
most unusual  place.  Perhaps unique in the universe.   Certainly unique in our
solar system.   Perhaps unique in our galaxy.

I remember asking a Grade Ten class to speculate on what life would be like
on our planet 50 years from now.  One boy ’s  answer remains with me.
“Sir, in 50 years we will have explored our solar system and other solar
systems.   We will have concluded that we are alone in the universe.”

What makes our planet singular…unusual?

The  September issue  of Scientific American is titled “Humans, why we’re unlike any other
species on the planet.”   At the back of that issue is an article  by John Gribbin titled :Why we are 
probably the only inellifent life in the galaxy…ALONE IN THE MILKY WAY.”

QUOTE FROM GRIBBIN,  P.96, SCIENTIFIC  AMERICAN,  SEPT. 2018

“ASTONOMERS HAVE FOUND thousands of planets orbiting other stars
in the Milky Way,  and 100 million more strars in the galaxy presumably host planets
of their own.  Given the sheer number of worlds out there,  scientists find
it easy to hope that some of them might be harbouring sentient beings (like us).
After all, could  Earth really be unique among so many planets.”

John Gribbin’s answer?

“It could.  Optimism about the possibilities  of intelligent extraterrestrial life ignores
what we know about how humans came to exist.  We are  here because  of a
long chain of implausible coincidences — many, many things had to go right
to result in the  situation  in which  we find ourselves.  The chain is so implausible,
in fact, that there is good reason to conclude that humans most likely are the
only technological civilization in the galaxy.
(Let us leave aside  the other countless  galaxies in the cosmos because, as 
the  saying has it, ‘in an infiinte universe, anything  is  possible.”)

So Mr. Gribbin  is saying the same thing my Grade 10 student said…i.e.
we are alone.

We are the result of a  whole mess of good  luck.   And some of that
luck is apparent in the places I have worked.  If I had to drive a
thumb tack into the centre  point of my mining exploration activities
i would drive that point into Mile  71 on the Algoma  Central Railway.

And the place is called Paradise  Lodge.   No doubt the name was
chosen to attract fishermen rather than the Paradise  of which I speak.
Let me just select some of the lucky circumstances.

First and foremost is  the thin crust of rock and minerals on which
Paradise  Lodge rests.  Very little topsoil because  past centuries
of glaciation has pushed whatever topsoil once existed into depressions
or into glacial rubbish hills far to the south in Ontario.  That has exposed
the vast sheet of granite and  volcanic rock  on which our thin
crust of earth floats.  Our own  tectonic plate.  Our Canadian Shield.

Beneath that shield is an immensely thick envelope of  molten magma…molten 
rock and minerals.   And deeper still is the core of the earth there  is a  Heavy metallic
core of  nickel  and iron.  Hot as the hubs of hell.  Huge core.  A  solid core…but a hot core…
that rolls around somewhat creating the magnetic  field that shields us
all from the deadly cosmic rays  emitted by the sun.   Without this magnetic
field  we would  be fried.  Fried?  More than  that.  We would never have come
into existence in the first place.

As  astronomers search  the galaxy for other worlds  like ours they have
found  many that exist in a  liveable zone like earth.  But they have not 
found  as yet round balls like ours with a heavy metal core, a huge envelope
of molten magma that occasionally bursts through the thin but solid tectonic
plates  that float on this molten sea.  We need that magma since it carries
and replaces  the minerals  upon which our civilization is  more and  more
dependent.  Like copper.

Why are these tectonic  plates  so thin.  Why  is there not a solid envelope 
of rock surrounding the atmospheric envelope in which  we find the Oxygen
that gives us  life.  Why is the Canadian Shield  so thin  that it has lots
of  cracks?   Why  are these cracks important.? 

Let me return to Mr. Grabbin.    In ancient times…billions of years ago, our
earth collided with another planet.   It was  not a direct hit so most
of the earth survived.  The collision was a glancing blow that sheared
of a  great slice of our planet.  The part sheared of was  mostly the cold
crust of lighter rock like our granite.  once sheared the  rock hurtled into space.  But that sheared portion
did not escape.  The power of  mother earth…i.e. the power of gravity…
prevented  the sheared bit of the planet from escaping.  The lump, held  by
gravity, orbited our earth and rounded itself off to become our moon.
The moon was an accident of  birth.  The moon exerts gravitation force
that holds  our earth in a  stable position.  Without the moon we would
be revolving.  No orderly seasons.  Rolling heater skelter.  Chaos.

That collision carved away a great slab of the earth’s crust.  What remained
was …is…a much thinner crust of  moving plates  of rock of which the
Canadian Shield is but one plate.  When the plates collide mountains  are
formed and some of the hot magma  intrudes bringing up copper, gold,  iron,
silver, molybdenum, and  other minerals without which we cannot live.
Lucky us!  That thin crust is crucial.  Had  the crust of the earth remained
solid and thick , we would not be here. We  certainly would  not be driving
around in ‘Planes, Trains and automobiles’.

Something else happened  in that collision.  The heavy core  of the earth
remained and  all the heavier parts of the pieces in the collision
were drawn  together forming that nickel / iron core and the great 
massive molten surrounding envelope.   That core  provided  the magnetic
force to hold the big  fragment piece in place…the moon is held in place
by the gravitational force of  our earth’s core.

This sounds simple.  Or maybe it sounds improbable.  Maybe I am wrong
in some of what I have written.  Be that as it may.   

Paradise Lodge is located at Mile 71 on the Algoma Central Railway.
Geophyicists like my boss Dr. Norman Paterson were contracted by
some mining company  that sent an  airborne magnetometer over
Paradise Lodge and  surrounding Boreal Forest.  The magnetometer
gave off some weird  blips in places.  What were these blips?  
Something weird  was  going on .  “Send in a ground crew to
check out those anomalies.  We might find veins of Chalcopyrite
intrusions  in the granite.   If we do, we could get very rich.
The world needs more and more copper.  Without copper electric motors
cannot be made.  Our civilization could collapse.  Bottom line?  We 
could make lots of money.”

No need to tell  the ground crew much about what seems to be happening
with the readings.  Interpretation is a job for geophysicists.  Getting
the numbers is a job for instrument men.   Can secrecy be maintained?
Tell the survey crew to keep their mouths shut.

So, finally,afer 60 years I have opened my mouth.  Yes, my words
are simplistic.  What do you expect from  an instrument man?

alan skeoch
August  2020

NEXT EPISODE… ALGOMA AND THE MAN WHO GOT THINGS ROLLING

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