IC 7871 Lode-Tin Mining At Lost River, Seward Peninsula, Alaska ? Summary

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 83
- File Size:
- 34165 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1958
Abstract
Tin mining on Seward Peninsula, Alaska, has been intermittently active since the early 1900's. Most of the recorded production (over 2,200 short tons of metallic tin) has been obtained from placer deposits, but recent production also has resulted from development of lode deposits associated with intrusive rocks occurring in the western part of the peninsula. Generally, the lode deposits containing tin minerals (principally cassiterite) are found in dikes, in granite masses, and in silicate zones in limestone overlying the granite. Both the placer and lode deposits have been of considerable strategic interest to the Government because of the almost total absence of a domestic supply of tin. The most important tin-lode deposit discovered to date is in the Cassiterite dike at the Lost River mine, on Cassiterite Creek about 85 miles northwest of Nome. This highly altered, rhyolite porphyry dike averages 12 feet in thickness, strikes N. 75° to 85° E., and dips steeply to the south; it can be traced on the surface for about 8,000 feet. Throughout its explored length of about 2,200 feet the dike everywhere contains some tin and tungsten in veinlets and disseminations; economic concentration of the are minerals, however, is confined to definite shoots. The ore minerals include cassiterite, stannite, hulsite, paigeite, wolframite, scheelite, and base-metal sulfides; gangue minerals include fluorite, boron silicates, and lithium-bearing minerals. Some ore minerals also occur in the numerous other dikes and in the granite and intruded limestone in and adjacent to the mine.
Citation
APA:
(1958) IC 7871 Lode-Tin Mining At Lost River, Seward Peninsula, Alaska ? SummaryMLA: IC 7871 Lode-Tin Mining At Lost River, Seward Peninsula, Alaska ? Summary. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1958.