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Mineral resource assessment of the Pacific Margin sponge reef areas of interest
Author(s) -
J. Vaughn Barrie
Publication year - 2012
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.4095/291498
Subject(s) - reef , oceanography , geology , submarine pipeline , mineral resource classification , resource (disambiguation) , marine protected area , fishery , geochemistry , ecology , habitat , computer network , computer science , biology
Glass sponge reefs (Hexactinellida, Hexactinosida) off the Pacific Margin of Canada are both geologically and ecologically unique and represent the only global occurrence. In order to provide protection to these unique living cold-water reefs, the Department ofFisheries and Oceans under the Oceans Act have made the four large reefs within the Pacific North Coast Integrated Management Area (PNCIMA) designates for protection as Marine Protected Areas (MPA). The federal government's process for evaluation of a MPA of Interest requires an assessment of thenon-renewable resource potential, including marine minerals. Based on the limited knowledge of the offshore British Columbia surficial mineral potential, two settings that may contain mineral placers of gold and titanium include drowned beach and reworked shelf deposits at water depths of 150 m tothe modern beach. In addition, extensive areas of construction aggregate and calcium carbonate occur on the shelf. The deep water sponge reefs within the Areas of Interest occur in depths below 150 m within glacial sediments and, therefore, outside the potential setting for mineral placers orindustrial minerals. Consequently, the enactment of the sponge reef Marine Protected Areas will not include any surficial mineral deposits of economic potential.

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