Lake Champlain (Plattsburgh) Paper - The Gold-Fields of Otago

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
T. A. Rickard
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
32
File Size:
1302 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1893

Abstract

The province of Otago consists, roughly speaking, of the southern half of the South Island* of New Zealand. On three sides it is washed by the Pacific Ocean and on the north it abuts against Westland and Canterbury. It covers an area of over 20,000 square miles, and for the most part has an extremely broken surface; the narrow plains of the sea-board are bounded by the rounded foothills which in turn are overlooked by range after range of the snowy summits whose varied beauty has made the island known as the Switzerland of the southern hemisphere. The gold-fields are confined to the quartzose schists which, in a broad band, 70 to 75 miles wide, cross the district, extending in a northwesterly direction from the shore of the western ocean into the northern provinces. These quartzose schists are the characteristic rocks of Otago, and to their curious structure are due the interesting differences exhibited by the mining districts in the modes of occurrence of the gold. These rocks, which are almost unbroken over their full extent, have been divided by the Provincial Geologist, F. W. Hutton, into two series of beds, named respectively the Wanaka and Kakanui formations. The only reason given for this division is the desire " to divide such an enormous thickness of rocks in order that the map might display somewhat of the geological structure of the district." As Hutton and others have pointed out, there is in fact no dividing line. The changes noticeable in the ascending series of schists are very gradual, and are due to the slowly decreasing effects of metamorphism. Hutton estimates the thickness of the Wanaka series at as much as 50,000 feet, and the
Citation

APA: T. A. Rickard  (1893)  Lake Champlain (Plattsburgh) Paper - The Gold-Fields of Otago

MLA: T. A. Rickard Lake Champlain (Plattsburgh) Paper - The Gold-Fields of Otago. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1893.

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