Kentucky Fluorspar and Its Value to the Iron- and Steel-Industries

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
F. Julius Fohs
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
13
File Size:
567 KB
Publication Date:
Apr 1, 1909

Abstract

CENTRALLY located with relation to the largest iron- and steel-producing districts of the United States, the fluorspar-deposits of Kentucky possess increasing interest and importance. As typical of the numerous fluorspar-mines of Kentucky and Illinois, I have selected for description the Memphis., because it and others of its immediate group exhibit the conditions characteristic of all. I. THE MEMPHIS MINE. This mine lies 5 miles NW. of Marion, in Crittenden county, Kentucky, a station on the Chicago and Nashville division of the Illinois Central R. R. For the first mile and a half out of Marion we see only Birdsville or Middle Chester sandstones of Mississippian age. Then we cross a fault of some 350 ft. displacement, and the Ste. Genevieve oolite sets in. Beyond the fault, oolite is the predominant rock, except that the bills to the north have a capping of Cypress or lowest Chester sandstone, 80 ft. below which is an outcrop of from 6 to 10 ft. of Ste. Genevieve (Rosiclare) sandstone. Occasional sink-holes are noticed, and as the mines are approached evidence of faulting is again seen.. A line of crude head-frames and open-cut dumps, extending for more than a quarter of a mile, marks the Klondike vein. The open-cuts are from 15 to 20 ft. deep, and in most of them, from the surface down, was found the reddish gravel which is really fluorspar-some of it white or purple and crystal-clear (if the red clay is washed off), and some carrying iron and silica, and stained by waters from the decaying limestone walls. In one of these cuts, at a depth of 20 ft., white and purplish honey-combed fluorspar was found, in which the larger cavities are due to limestone and calcite leaching, and the minute ones to the leaching of zinc-blende.
Citation

APA: F. Julius Fohs  (1909)  Kentucky Fluorspar and Its Value to the Iron- and Steel-Industries

MLA: F. Julius Fohs Kentucky Fluorspar and Its Value to the Iron- and Steel-Industries. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1909.

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