Basaltic Zones As Guides To Ore-Deposits In The Cripple Creek District, Colorado

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
E. A. Stevens
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
13
File Size:
492 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1913

Abstract

IT has been ascertained in recent years that certain rocktypes, geological formations and structural conditions may be used as fairly reliable guides, when prospecting in recognized mineral belts or mining districts, with a reasonable certainty of discovering "pay-ore;" and that such is considered as a practically established conclusion may be inferred from a perusal of the recent reports of the U. S. Geological Survey and the literature of the several scientific societies discussing minim, geology, and kindred subjects. Cripple Creek is no exception to this conclusion, and the rock-type or association, rather than the structural condition, is the most infallible guide.† These guides consist of four, possibly five, dike-rocks, three of which are extremely basic, while the fourth is an acid rock of an entirely dissimilar character. The basic rocks are nepheline-basalt, limburgite, feldspar-basalt and tephrite. There are grounds, however, for believing that the two latter are subdivisions of one type, and therefore will be described under one head. The acid rock is quartz-porphyry. Nepheline-basalt is-a rock encountered in but few localities elsewhere on this continent, and occurs in narrow dikes cutting various formations. When typical‡ it is composed of
Citation

APA: E. A. Stevens  (1913)  Basaltic Zones As Guides To Ore-Deposits In The Cripple Creek District, Colorado

MLA: E. A. Stevens Basaltic Zones As Guides To Ore-Deposits In The Cripple Creek District, Colorado. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1913.

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