New York Paper - The Franklinite and Zinc Litigation, concerning the Deposits of Mine Hill at Franklin Furnace, Sussex County, N. J.

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Joseph C. Platt
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The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
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5
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Abstract

It is not the object of the present paper to give a description of the minerals found on Mine Hill, in Sussex County, N. J., nor even to touch upon all the forms of the ores named, but to place upon record and call to the attention of the Institute some interesting facts concerning them. In May, 1875, after the Dover meeting, some of the members visited this locality, and, no doubt, it is fresh in their memories, being one of the best known mineralogical points in our country. It will be only necessary to describe it very briefly. Mine Hill and Stirling Hill, in Sussex County, N. J.,—the former being at the village of Franklin Furnace, and the latter near Ogdensburg,—are the only localities in the State where zinc ores are found in workable quantities.* Mine Hill is the more northerly, and mineralogically differs from its neighbor, chiefly in having no hydrated ores to speak of, while at Stirling this deposit is considerable. At both points Franklinite, red oxide, and silicate of zinc occur in large quantities. Mine Hill lies on the east side of the Wallkill River, above which it rises to an extreme elevation of about 150 feet. On the summit the outcrop of the Franklinite vein appears, while the lowest worked points are perhaps 10 or 15 feet above the level of the stream. Cornmencing at the northern end, where the Hamburg Road crosses it, this outcrop runs along the northwestern brow of the hill a distance of about 2000 feet, in a general southwest direction, to a point where is a large, cavern-like opening, called the "Southwest Opening." " Double Rock," about the highest point on the hill, lies near the middle of this 2000 feet of outcrop, and over or near it passes a property line, to which allusion will hereafter be made. At the Southwest Opening the vein bends abruptly towards the east,—the angle between the two parts being perhaps 45°,—and this easterly branch continues some 700 feet. From the northern part of the Stirling Hill deposit to the southern part of the Mine Hill deposit is about two miles, and in this interval the vein carrying Franklinite
Citation

APA: Joseph C. Platt  New York Paper - The Franklinite and Zinc Litigation, concerning the Deposits of Mine Hill at Franklin Furnace, Sussex County, N. J.

MLA: Joseph C. Platt New York Paper - The Franklinite and Zinc Litigation, concerning the Deposits of Mine Hill at Franklin Furnace, Sussex County, N. J.. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers,

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