Cigar Lake mine

[7] The deposit is located at depth of 450 m (1,480 ft), surrounded by and isolated within a layer of water-impermeable illite-chlorite clay, within the Athabasca Sandstone formation.

[1] In 2005, Kenton Joel Carnegie, a 22-year-old Canadian geological engineering student from Ontario on a work term from the University of Waterloo, was killed by wolves at Points North Landing, near Cameco's Rabbit Lake mine.

[14] On 29 August 2016, a 26-year-old shift worker walking between buildings at the Cigar Lake mine on his midnight break was attacked and mauled by a lone timber wolf.

A nearby security guard frightened the wolf away, administered first aid, and called for an air ambulance which medevaced him 675 km (419 mi) to a hospital in Saskatoon where he recovered.

After the attack, authorities ordered that area wolves be shot, that food disposal systems and fencing be inspected, and that staff be educated.

Cutaway diagram of the Cigar Lake uranium deposit, showing the layers of rock surrounding the uranium ore