Geochemical Study Of Soil Contamination In The Coeur D'Alene District, Shoshone County, Idaho

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 6
- File Size:
- 577 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 2, 1959
Abstract
Geochemical prospecting seeks hidden mineral deposits by sampling for variations in the chemical composition of naturally occurring materials. Usually the samples are of soils and other products of weathering and erosion-surface materials extremely susceptible to contamination by human activities. Except when a survey is conducted well away from populated areas, contamination is an ever-present hazard. The program's success is particularly endangered when the contaminants are the elements sought; if these occur erratically throughout an area, spurious anomalies completely unrelated to mineralized areas can be formed. Evenly distributed contamination can be dangerous too, if it raises the background to such a level that true anomalies can no longer be easily detected. Suppose, for ex- ample, that in an area where the lead background is 20 parts per million the soil over a lead vein contains 1000 ppm of lead. Here the contrast would be 50 to 1, which is very satisfactory for geochemical surveying. Now if 1000 ppm of lead from some source were added evenly to the soil in this area, the contrast would be reduced to about 2 to 1, and the anomaly would no longer be readily detectable because a threshold of significance twice the value of the background is the minimum generally used for interpreting geochemical data.
Citation
APA:
(1959) Geochemical Study Of Soil Contamination In The Coeur D'Alene District, Shoshone County, IdahoMLA: Geochemical Study Of Soil Contamination In The Coeur D'Alene District, Shoshone County, Idaho. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1959.