Mary Devine completed BSc at Memorial University of Newfoundland in 2011

She started her MSc thesis project in the Athabasca Basin in northern Saskatchewan in

the fall of 2013.

Currently, she is working as an Environmental Field Technologist, Parsons Consulting in Ontario.

 

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Her presentation.

Devine, M., Hattori, K., Cornett, J., Kotzer, T., 2014. Detection of deeply buried uranium deposits using radon gas dissolved in groundwater: a case study in the Athabasca Basin. Joint Annual meeting of the Geological Association of Canada and Mineralogical Association of Canada, Fredericton, NB. Abstract

 

Devine, M., Hattori, K., Cornett, J., Kotzer, T., 2014. Detection of a deeply buried uranium deposit using radon gas in the Athabasca Basin. Advances in Earth Science Research Conference at the University of Ottawa in March, 2014

 

Devine, M., Hattori, K., Cornett, J., Kotzer, T., 2014. Dispersion of radon gas above deeply buried uranium ore: Millennium deposit, Athabasca Basin, Saskatchewan.  CMIC-SEG- PDAC Minerals Colloquium, Toronto.  Poster (6.2 Mb)

 

 

Devine, M., Hattori, K., Kotzer, T. and Cornett, J., 2013.  The dispersion of radon above deeply buried uranium ore: Millennium deposit, Athabasca Basin, Saskatchewan.

Saskatchewan Geological Survey Open House, Dec 2-4, 2013.

 

 

 

 

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Mary getting into a float plane at Point North. It took us to Slush Lake in the Cameco’s Millennium property

Field work within the Millennium property used an UTV shown above. 

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Water samples at different depths (10, 30, 50 m) were collected using a point-source bailer. Mary Devine (Right), Keiko Hattori (Left)