Natural Resources CanadaGovernment of Canada
 
 Français  Contact us  Help  Search  Canada site
 ESS Home  Priorities  Products &
 services
 About the
 Sector
 Site map
Satellite image of Canada
Natural Resources Canada
Geoscape Canada
Home
Calgary
Home
Introduction
Satellite image of Calgary
Landscapes
Stable crust
Glacial history
Rock resources
Sandstone City
Fossil fuel energy
Slope stability
Rivers... friend and foe
Groundwater
Virtual tours
Geology tour
River tour
Flyovers
Poster
How to buy the poster
Bibliography
Contributors
Related links
Bow River Basin Waterscape


Print version Print version
Geoscape Canada
Earth Sciences Sector > Priorities > Geoscape Canada > Calgary
Geoscape Calgary
Rock resources
PreviousIndexNext

Valuable building stone and aggregate materials are abundant in the mountains and along the Bow River valley, reducing the need for lengthy transport. Did you know that the Calgary Tower and the Banff Springs Hotel were built with materials from our own backyard?

Rundle Rock was used to build the Banff Springs Hotel (Photo: B. Groulx)
Rundle Rock was used to build the Banff Springs Hotel
(Photo: B. Groulx)

 Rundle Rock

Rundle Rock on the Banff Springs Hotel (Photo: B. Groulx)
Rundle Rock on the Banff Springs Hotel
(Photo: B. Groulx)

Rundle Rock is a blocky brown sandstone with flat, smooth surfaces. This popular decorative stone was first described by geologist R.G. McConnell in 1887. It was named by stonemasons quarrying the rock from the base of Mount Rundle near the town of Banff. Today this sandstone is quarried just east of Canmore. It originated as sand deposited on Early Mesozoic seafloors about 245 million years ago.

 Cement

Sandstone and shale, trucked from quarries at Seebe near Mount Yamnuska, are combined with limestone at Exshaw, to produce cement. The process involves grinding and blending the rocks, and burning the mix in kilns.

Limestone quarry on Grotto Mountain (Photo: D. Edwards)
Limestone quarry on Grotto Mountain
(Photo: D. Edwards)

 Concrete

Gravel is excavated from many pits around Calgary. It is combined with cement to form concrete, or with oil to form asphalt for building roads, bridges, sidewalks, and buildings. The Calgary Tower is a highly visible example of the use of concrete.

Gravel extraction near Calgary (Photo: T. Poulton)
Gravel extraction near Calgary
(Photo: T. Poulton)

The Calgary Tower (Photo: B. Groulx)
The Calgary Tower
(Photo: B. Groulx)

 Lime

Limestone, trucked from the Grotto Mountain quarry, is crushed, screened, and burned in kilns at about 1450°C to produce lime (calcium oxide). Lime is used in agriculture, in water treatment, in sugar refining, and in the manufacture of steel and paper.

Lime processing plant (Photo: D. Edwards)
Lime processing plant
(Photo: D. Edwards)

PreviousIndexNext


2005-06-17Important notices