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Amethyst mine makes exclusive guidebook list.


Amethyst amethyst (ăm`əthĭst) [Gr.,=non-drunkenness], variety of quartz, violet to purple in color, used as a gem. It is the most highly valued of the semiprecious quartzes.  Mine Panorama has been selected as a Rand McNally Rand McNally & Company is the preeminent American publisher of maps, atlases, and globes for travel, reference, commercial, and educational uses. It also provides online consumer street maps and directions, as well as commercial transportation routing software and mileage data.  & Co. pick for 2006.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Like any tourist travelling the northwest, the Rand employee came into the 55-year old mine site unannounced. One of the 16 full-time, summer employees might have assisted him in partaking in one of the four tours that escort visitors down to the mine quarry where excavation occurs. The gift store would have provided saleable sale·a·ble  
adj.
Variant of salable.


saleable or US salable
Adjective

fit for selling or capable of being sold

saleability or US
 items.

Later, unbeknownst to the business owners, he would have checked with community partners and potentially the government to get an idea of the company's health, owner Steve Lukinuk says. He says they knew nothing of this until they were sent a certificate and a write-up explaining they were the chosen as the "Editor's Pick."

Over 200 customers travel to the mine site each day, including families and couples, both young and old.

Located 56 kilometres east of Thunder Bay Thunder Bay, city (1991 pop. 113,946), SW Ont., Canada, on Thunder Bay inlet of Lake Superior. The city was created in 1970 by the amalgamation of the twin cities of Fort William and Port Arthur and two adjoining townships. , the only Amethyst mine in North America North America, third largest continent (1990 est. pop. 365,000,000), c.9,400,000 sq mi (24,346,000 sq km), the northern of the two continents of the Western Hemisphere.  opens May 15 and closes Oct. 15. It is comprised of three sub-operations: the tourism mine site, the rough rock sales and the manufacturing component.

Visitors touring the gemstone-rich location can learn the history of the mine site and the gemstones found within, while traveling with a tour to the bottom of the quarry. For $2 per pound, tourists can go into the five-acre material waste site and find their own gemstone gemstone

Any of various minerals prized for beauty, durability, and rarity. A few noncrystalline materials of organic origin (e.g., pearl, red coral, and amber) also are classified as gemstones.
 with tools provided by the owners.

"People will spend a half hour, an hour, and sometimes longer out there playing in the water, getting dirty and finding their own amethysts," says Steve's son Tim Lukinuk, who manages the gift store.

Two full-time miners extract gemstones destined des·tine  
tr.v. des·tined, des·tin·ing, des·tines
1. To determine beforehand; preordain: a foolish scheme destined to fail; a film destined to become a classic.

2.
 to be polished and made into saleable carvings, bookends, clocks, or jewelry in the gift store. Tim says this spin-off industry consistently out-performs the other two operations.

Most of the amethysts on the international market come from Zambia or Brazil. It is Ontario's mineral emblem and places fourth in the value of gemstones. The mineral was mined and sold as early as the 1870s, but the discovery of the mine site in the 1950s brought forth resurgence in the market. In the 1980s, the Lukinuks opened their doors to the public satisfying market demand by providing value-added, saleable materials.

"Twenty-five years ago you could not get an Ontario amethyst gemstone ring," Steve says. "There are all kinds of them now. You could not get a carving. Now we know what the market (demand) is and what to expect."

Most of the visitors to the site have done their homework on the company's website. Families book their vacation in advance and make their way to the mine site through the summer, but in the spring and fall couples tend to make up a majority of their clientele, partly because they follow the highway signs.

People of all ages appear to take a keen interest in exploring the mine, Tim says.

"They are so excited to get (the amethyst) from the actual place where it is mined."

A new 1,000-square-foot interpretive centre interpretive centre
Noun

a building situated at a place of interest, such as a country park or historical site, that provides information about the site by showing videos, exhibiting objects, etc.
 is being built on the property where more polished gemstones will be displayed and sold. A detailed mineral history of the region will also be included along with a weigh-in centre for rough gemstones.

www.amethystmine.com

By KELLY LOUISEIZE

Northern Ontario Business Northern Ontario Business is a Canadian magazine, which publishes monthly in Greater Sudbury, Ontario. The magazine covers business news and issues in Northern Ontario.  
COPYRIGHT 2005 Laurentian Business Publishing, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2005, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.
Feldwebel Wolfenstool
Raymond Hietapakka (Member): Obviously, they never did a "customer-satisfaction" survey. 1/6/2008 12:05 PM
Besides LYING about their production statistics of 50,000 TPY, for YEARS...this "operation" has single-handedly reduced tourist visitation from 100,000 per year, to less than 30,000 visits. The owner here, was elected President of a fledgling Amethyst Miner's Assoc. He RUINED the association, by REFUSING to hold ANY MEETINGS whatsoever. It's a real unfortunate situation for the rest of us, now that this lawyer's kid is head of the NWO Tourist Association.<br>The City of Thunder Bay Tourism department literally GOES OUT OF IT's WAY to ignore the amethyst business, and every last one of us here......except for this lawyer's business, of course...<br>...all this means is more disgruntled tourists today, which will tranlate into NO TOURISTS tommorow!

 Reader Opinion

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Author:Louiseize, Kelly
Publication:Northern Ontario Business
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Dec 1, 2005
Words:549
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