Mining Geophysics In Sweden - Its Past, Present And Future - Introduction

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
D. S. Parasnis
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
37
File Size:
1530 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1975

Abstract

The early beginnings of mining geophysics in Sweden can be traced back to the reign of queen Kristina in the 17th century. The mine compass, consisting of a freely suspended magnetic needle in a casing, was in use certainly by 1640 and probably earlier for locating iron ore deposits. Whether the mine compass was a Swedish invention or not is an unsettled question since the possibility cannot be overlooked that the celebrated Nürnberg compass-makers of the 16th century may have constructed it for the first time(1). Be that as it may, the mine compass was very extensively employed in Sweden for more than two centuries and met with spectacular success in locating magnetic deposits under shallow overburden. Occasionally the diligent prospector would even be rewarded with a pyrrhotitebearing sulphide deposit, as witness many old sulphide-ore pits and some mines still in operation from the 17th and the 18th centuries. The mine compass measured only the orientation of the Earth's magnetic field and not its strength. Although it was improved in construction and sensitivity over the ages, no great strides were made in magnetic prospecting after the initial discovery of the use of the compass until Gauss, omnipresent in 19th century physics and mathematics, showed with the assistance of Weber how the strength of a magnetic field could be determined.
Citation

APA: D. S. Parasnis  (1975)  Mining Geophysics In Sweden - Its Past, Present And Future - Introduction

MLA: D. S. Parasnis Mining Geophysics In Sweden - Its Past, Present And Future - Introduction. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1975.

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