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exposed at the base of Coal
Mountain & founded Coal and Coke Company. The town was built at an elevation of 5060 feet (1542 metres), and at one time it boasted a population of 600. It had its own railway, a company store, and a hotel, but it was isolated. No roads connected it to the outside, and
77:. Due to the structural complexity, the seam thicknesses were quite variable, with the Mammoth Seam reaching a maximum of about 450 feet (137 metres). Most of the coal mined at that time was sold to the
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Byron Creek
Collieries opened a large open-pit mine at Corbin in 1972, but again most of the workers traveled from elsewhere. The mine was bought and sold several times until it was acquired by
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British
Columbia coal industry overview, 2018, British Columbia Ministry of Energy, Mines and Petroleum Resources, British Columbia Geological Survey, Information Circular 2019-02, p. 3 and 7.
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in 2008, at which time it became known as the Coal
Mountain Operations. Its coal reserves were mined out by the end of 2018, and work transitioned to
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69:. Two seams, called the Mammoth Seam and the Upper Seam, were worked. They lay in complexly folded and faulted strata of the
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A major strike that began in
January of 1935 turned violent in April. The mine closed on May 7 and the town was abandoned.
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there was no electricity or plumbing. Winters were harsh and living conditions were poor. The workers unionized in 1910.
206:
MacKay, B.R. 1931a. Corbin Coal Field. Geological Survey of Canada, Summary Report, 1930, Part A, p. 154A-179A.
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MacKay, B.R., 1931b. Corbin area, Kootenay
District, British Columbia. Geological Survey of Canada, Map 279A.
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Between 1905 and 1935 the coal at Corbin was worked at a succession of six mines, of which five were
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activities. The old townsite remains popular for camping and outdoor recreation.
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The mine was operated by a different company for a few years during
65:(the No. 1, 2, 4, 5, and 6 Mines) and one (the No. 3 Mine) was an
34:. It was a coal mining community located at the foot of
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38:(elev. 6835 feet; 2083 metres), south of the
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239:"Corbin, Workers' Hell at Coal Mountain"
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237:Foster, S. and Bachusky, J. 2005.
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51:Nelson and Fort Sheppard Railway
341:Ghost towns in British Columbia
243:Ghost Towns of British Columbia
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164:"The Story of Coal Mountain"
162:Teck Resources Ltd., 2018.
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99:to supply the smelter at
81:, commercial centers in
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71:Mist Mountain Formation
216:Barlee, N.L. (1973),
137:BC Geographical Names
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108:Teck Resources Ltd.
317:49.517°N 114.650°W
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246:. Retrieved
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143:2011-11-07
118:References
83:Washington
24:ghost town
335:Category
308:114°39′W
258:cite web
183:cite web
132:"Corbin"
67:open pit
305:49°31′N
73:in the
248:9 June
173:9 June
87:Oregon
32:Canada
22:is a
20:Corbin
101:Trail
268:link
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250:2019
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175:2019
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