Magnetite to be shipped by truck from Montana to Elk Valley coal mines

by Keith Powell
Picture of the Mission Mountain Railroad.

Using a combination of trains and trucks, magnetite will be shipped to the Elk Valley coal mines from Montana. — Photo: Flickr/Misson Mountain Railroad

Hundreds of tons of magnetite will soon be shipped by truck from Fortine, Montana to the Elk Valley coal mines, according the Flathead Beacon newspaper based in Kalispell.

BNSF Railroad is shipping the product from Longview, Washington to Montana via their mainline, and then a local short-line railroad called the Mission Mountain Railroad will transport it to Fortine. From Fortine the magnetite will be transferred to trucks which will transport the product another 80 miles, across the Canadian border at Roosville, along Highway #3 to the Elk Valley coal mines.

The magnetite comes from mines in Mexico and South America. In the past, the magnetite was shipped directly to the Elk Valley by CPR trains, but according to David Walker, a director of rail logistics for BNSF, this involved a process called “interchange” or the handing off of freight cars to another large railroad which often resulted in delays in getting the product to the Sparwood mines on time.

What is magnetite? According to Wikipedia, magnetite is a mineral and one of the main iron ores. It is one of the oxides of iron and is ferri-magnetic, which means it is attracted to a magnet and can be magnetized to become a permanent magnet itself. Magnetite is black or brownish-black with a metallic luster, has a Mohs hardness of 5–6 and leaves a black streak on anything it touches. Its common chemical name is ferrous-ferric oxide.

The Beacon article further stated, “At Fortine, the freight car is moved onto what’s called a “team track” and emptied at a loading dock with a front end loader.”

Walker told the paper, “We think this is a good alternative to the traditional ways of moving products over the border. Customers want options for how they ship commodities, and this is a great option for those shipping to Canada.”

Magnetite will arrive in Fortine in 66-foot-long gondolas which can move 100 tons of product at once. The Elk Valley Teck coal mines use magnetite in the coal-washing process.

Read the entire story here:

http://flatheadbeacon.com/2016/11/11/a-railroad-on-a-mission/

Related articles

Large piece of machinery with person standing in bucket.
Mining Insider, Exploration, Mines, Northwest Territories, Nunavut, Yukon $500,000 federal funding to help promote northern mining at annual conference

The Yukon Mining Alliance will use the funding to help showcase the opportunities in the North at the annual PDAC Conference in Toronto

by Julie Matchett
Geoscience representative discussing info at open house with a man.
Mining Insider, Exploration, Minerals, Mines, British Columbia Geoscience BC targets ‘hidden’ Central Interior copper-gold deposits

The Central Interior Copper-Gold Research series aims to better understand potential deposits, attract investment and encourage exploration

by Julie Matchett
Close-up picture of PDAC Award, showing two stylized white hands holding up a transparent diamond shape printed with PDAC logo.
Mining Insider, Exploration, First Nations, Minerals, Mines, Global PDAC 2020 awards honour industry leaders

The 2020 PDAC Award recipients have been announced, celebrating outstanding achievement in the Canadian and international mining industry

by Julie Matchett
View all Mining Insider articles