Need for new Policies and new Tools in Mining Geophysics

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
P. R. Geoffroy
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
3
File Size:
2045 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1950

Abstract

Extensive and Intensive Prospecting As often pointed out, the search for new ore deposits may be carried on along two widely divergent lines. It may be either extensive or intensive. By extensive prospecting we mean a search for mineralized outcrops conducted over large and more or less virgin tracts of land, followed by a test of the practical value of any discovery made, the test being limited to the immediate vicinity of the outcrop. Extensive prospecting, was, in fact, the only policy known to the early prospectors. of the American continent and is still the rule in the remote sections of the Canadian Shield and in the African wilderness. It can be further characterized by the lack of emphasis placed on geological and other technical means as an aid to the search for ore. However, very little virgin ground is left, nowadays, for a man or a company to test their luck, and whatever is left is so remote from the necessary means of development that any new discovery will require considerable delay and expenditures to be amenable to profitable mining. On the other band, a great many of the favourable and still unexplored areas (and this is particularly true in Canada) are overburdened to such an extent that outcrops of bed-rock are extremely scarce and extensive prospecting is nearly impossible. Intensive prospecting, to the contrary, must be understood as a detailed search for ore carried on over limited areas in districts already known to be mineralized and covering regional structures whose relation to mineral deposits bas been estahlis.hed with a fair degree ot certainty. The search for deep-seated deposits in the vicinity of successful mines is a perfect example of intensive prospecting. As a matter of fact, the majority of the geologists employed by the mining industry are engaged in some kind of intensive prospecting.
Citation

APA: P. R. Geoffroy  (1950)  Need for new Policies and new Tools in Mining Geophysics

MLA: P. R. Geoffroy Need for new Policies and new Tools in Mining Geophysics. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 1950.

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