Investigation of Sheriff Stuart’s black granite quarries in Charlotte County, southwestern New Brunswick: implications for the source of the titanic headstones in Halifax, Nova Scotia
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Abstract
Robert Albert Stuart, the High Sheriff of Charlotte County, deserves credit for establishing the black granite monument industry in New Brunswick. In the late 19th to early 20th centuries, he opened three quarries in mafic plutonic rocks in the vicinity of the Chickahominy Mountain, north of St. Andrews: the Bocabec black granite quarry (1893), the Steen Lake black granite quarry (1895), and the Glenelg porphyry quarry (1906). Much of the information in brief articles in local newspapers lacks sufficient detail to gain a full understanding of the historical development of these quarries. To obtain a clearer timeline for production of stone from the quarries, the rock type in each was examined and compared to black granite monuments in nearby cemeteries known to be sourced from these specific quarries. Previous investigations did not entirely rule out the possibility that the Stuart quarries may have been a source for the headstones placed in the Fairview Lawn Cemetery in Halifax, Nova Scotia, to mark the graves of some of those who were lost when the Titanic sank in 1912. Our detailed analysis of rock textures and production histories leads us to conclude that none of the Stuart quarries could have been a source for the Titanic headstones and supports the previous assessment that they came from Charles Hanson quarry.
夏洛特县的高级治安官罗伯特·阿尔伯特·斯图尔特(Robert Albert Stuart)在新不伦瑞克建立了黑色花岗岩纪念碑产业,值得称赞。在19世纪末到20世纪初,他在圣安德鲁斯北部奇卡霍米尼山附近的基性深成岩中开了三个采石场:Bocabec黑色花岗岩采石场(1893年)、Steen Lake黑色花岗岩采石场(1895年)和Glenelg斑岩采石场(1906年)。当地报纸上的简短文章中的许多信息缺乏足够的细节,无法充分了解这些采石场的历史发展。为了获得采石场生产石头的更清晰的时间表,每个采石场的岩石类型都被检查,并与附近墓地中已知来自这些特定采石场的黑色花岗岩纪念碑进行比较。之前的调查并没有完全排除斯图尔特采石场可能是新斯科舍哈利法克斯Fairview Lawn公墓墓碑来源的可能性,这些墓碑是为了纪念1912年泰坦尼克号沉没时失去的一些人的坟墓。我们对岩石结构和生产历史的详细分析使我们得出结论,斯图尔特采石场都不可能是泰坦尼克号墓碑的来源,并支持了之前的评估,即它们来自查尔斯汉森采石场。
期刊介绍:
Atlantic Geology (originally Maritime Sediments, subsequently Maritime Sediments and Atlantic Geology) covers all aspects of the geology of the North Atlantic region. It publishes papers, notes, and discussions on original research and review papers, where appropriate to the regional geology.