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Victoria Mines Bedrock 
Monday, 27 August, 2007, 05:52 - - The Elements, - Unique Topics, - Travel, Special Features
Cyberware.ca Photography - Charred bedrock at Victoria Mines Photo Date: 17 August, 2007
ISO: 800
Shutter/Aperture: 1/1250, F/5
Camera: Olympus Evolt E-510
Category: Victoria Mines (Travel)


Victoria Mines initially used cordwood boilers to smelt it's ore however by 1909, electricity was run to the camp and the processing lept from 60,000 tonnes annually to 130,000 tonnes.
Industrialized rape compliments of the Victorian age.
Evidence of the open air smelting is, unfortunately, still blatantly obvious.
Broken and charred rock such as this is everywhere. Blown clear of it's facia, naked and bare to the eye.
In a few places an inch or so of nature has made a feeble recovery and despirately tries to conceal the aged scars and wounds in her side.
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Copper-Cobalt 
Friday, 24 August, 2007, 06:26 - - The Elements, - Unique Topics, - Travel, Special Features
Cyberware.ca Photography - Stray Ore at Victoria Mines Photo Date: 17 August, 2007
ISO: 100
Shutter/Aperture: 1/140, F/5.6
Camera: Olympus Evolt E-510
Category: Victoria Mines (Travel)


Although the mine was origionaly extracting copper/nickel, there are blatant signs of other ores strewn about the old smelter site that where simply cast aside. Either too costly to process or the profitable demand had not yet surfaced.
Cobalt for example is now used in batteries, super-alloys, magnetic recording media and nulear (dirty) bombs.
:omg: Oh yes, nuclear freakin weapons!
What the Crap!?! ... CRAP!!!
Yeah. Of the 26 different isotopes of Cobalt, only one of them is stable with a mere 3 others being non-radioactive.
Happy day!
I don't seem to remember that on the travel brochure ...
I suspect the actual danger from this is minimal here as Cobalt bits are scattered all over the Sudbury Basin and Environment Canada does regular testing of the immediate water table in this area. Checking up on the Totten Mine effluent you see.
:embarrassed: It is just background levels though ... right? Right?!?!
(No really, very little naturally occuring Co is dangerous ... you should still go here!)

This particular former chunk of granite has been blasted free of the bedrock from the high heat of the smelter and is heavily stained by copper, cobalt and iron. In the pentiful rock debris you can also still find traces of nickel/platinum and sulfur. Presumably mixtures of lead and arsenic (common waste products of the smelting process) are also abundant in the giant mounds of industrial Waste.
So don't eat it.

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Victoria Mines Road 
Cyberware.ca Photography - A Victoria Mines Roadway Photo Date: 17 August, 2007
ISO: 800
Shutter/Aperture: 1/640, F/10
Camera: Olympus Evolt E-510
Category: Victoria Mines (Travel)

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Victoria Mines Gate 
Tuesday, 21 August, 2007, 06:51 - - Unique Topics, - Travel, Special Features
Cyberware.ca Photography - Victoria Mines Gate Photo Date: 17 August, 2007
ISO: 100
Shutter/Aperture: 1/200, F/9
Camera: Olympus Evolt E-510
Category: Victoria Mines (Travel)

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Sudbury 2007 

Sudbury Vacation 2007


Another successful trip completed!
Returned from Sudbury last night, just a little after 9:30p. Not bad considering we left Sudbury proper at around 5:30 and waited 20 mins in line just outside of Parry Sound for a bathroom.
At 450kms or so, that's a little under 2 kms/minute (over if you exclude the bathroom break). Almost ideal!
The week went reasonably well and included sufficient lounging time to actually call it a vacation.
I must say, Northern Ontario, it's rocky mountains and it's crystal lakes, still have a vista like no other.
Camera happy? Yes. Have some!
In addition to the usual visits to Science North and the tourist-esque spots (that Sudbury slag heap is just so damned sexy!), we also managed to sneak down some lesser travelled routes to a couple of ghost towns ... or at least what little is left of them.
Unfortunately for historical exploration types, many of the old mines are being reopened by INCO due to rising metal prices and the discovery of deep-shaft diamond deposits in the Sudbury basin. As a result, you are either confronted with monster fences, Danger/No Trespassing signs and/or the area has been devistated with the final remanants of the towns having been destroyed, bulldozed or victimized by altered waterways.

Windy Lake Campfire. Sudbury's history is burning


Fine examples of The Corporate Machine cutting not only into the environment and rock faces but carving out pieces of our tenuous history as well.
Already the ghost town of Creighton has had it's roads cut and blocked off to the public due to the reopening of the nearby shaft (and yours truly getting the serious eyeball for travelling down, what turned out to be, employee only roads).
Even the commemorative plaque is off-limits!
Worthington is also at risk as the old Totten mine is under heavy construction (origionally closed on 4 October, 1927 when the mine collapsed). The drastic changes to the forest and watershed are destroying the last of the foundations and roadways. The new mine there is set to open in 2010 and I can only imagine what damage the slag and trailing wastes will do to the beautiful swamps, forest and waterways found around the soon to be minehead.
I suspect some of the remaining towns like Mond, Benny and Milnet are facing (or have already faced) similar fates.
The Environment Canada studies have already been done around all these sites, so it's now only a matter of money determining the final chapter these long forgotten towns.
If you want to see them, I'm afraid we're all out of time and you will have to go now.
Consider that a call to arms for all area photographers to preserve these final hours.
Over the next week, I'll try to get up a few pics from Victoria Mine to show what little is still there. The final remaining building seems to have been torn down in the last few years, so only cinder roads, foundations and the slag from the open air smelter remain.
If anyone needs maps and directions, drop me a line and I can get them out to you, or most of these places are also included in the 2007/2008 Ontario Road Atlas by Map Art.
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Once Upon A Time ... (Summary) 
Monday, 11 June, 2007, 06:27 - - Travel, Special Features
Just in follow up to the Once Upon A Time ... (in Mexico?) set. A quick run down of who was hurt when, where and how as well as some final totals based on those earlier stats.
Might be something to think about when you're wondering why that one hotel is just soooo much cheaper then the others.
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Once Upon A Time ... (Part IV) 
Friday, 8 June, 2007, 06:42 - - Travel, Special Features
Well, the fourth and final story in the Once Upon A Time series is finally upon us. This last story isn't really about subterfuge or conspiracy, it doesn't involve alcohol or stupidity (at least on behalf of the victim) and technically the victim wasn't even really a tourist (exchange student). It does however represent a good culmination of the deaths of Canadians in the Mexico with some revealing attitudes of the locals.
The murder of Calgary's Kristen Deyell.
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