Vancouver Sun

Open-pit mines in Nova Scotia sold to Australian firm

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HALIFAX A large, open-pit gold operation located in the historic Nova Scotia mining district of Moose River has been sold to an Australian firm.

A news release issued earlier this week says St Barbara mining has acquired Atlantic Gold Corp., with plans to raise further capital for a possible listing on the Toronto Stock Exchange.

Shareholde­rs are receiving $2.90 per share for a total equity value of $722 million under terms of the takeover.

The company has been mining gold in open pit operations at the Touquoy mine and has mapped out four deposits in some of the province’s long-dormant undergroun­d gold districts.

The Touquoy operation, just a 90-minute drive from Halifax, relies on huge volumes of ore going through mass crushing and leaching to draw out the tiny amounts of gold.

They are then melted into gold bars on the site.

However, local residents and environmen­tal groups have expressed concern about how water stored in holding ponds will be treated prior to their return to local watersheds on the Eastern Shore.

The Eastern Shore Forest Watch Associatio­n has argued nitrogen in the effluent — in part from the explosives — could possibly lead to unnatural enrichment of surroundin­g waters, leading to potential fish kills.

In addition, the movement of ore by heavy trucking to the crushing site has generated criticism due to noise and dust levels.

The Canadian Environmen­tal Assessment Agency has been examining the impacts of the second open pit, the Beaver Dam project, which would have trucks carrying ore over rural highways to Touquoy.

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