Origin Of Vermont Copper Ores And Its Bearing On Exploration

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
William F. Jenks
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
11
File Size:
3806 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1968

Abstract

The possibility that a hypothesis explains almost all observed facts may be satisfying. Yet the almost gives a distinct sense of uncertainty. Moreover, overlooking the almost, reliance on the favored hypothesis may close our eyes to the discovery of new information and, in the field of mineral exploration, to the possibilities of finding new and hidden ores. A case in point is that of mines such as the Elizabeth and Ely, along the copper belt in eastern Vermont, principally in Orange County. The geology of the Strafford Quadrangle, where the Elizabeth Mine is located, has been described by Doll (1944). Two informative papers (McKinstry and Mikkola, 1954, Howard, 1959) present much valuable information about the geology of the Elizabeth Mine. Both reach the conclusion that the ores were emplaced after the peak of metamorphism, through the agency of metal-bearing hydrothermal solutions. Both, therefore, conclude that the source of the ores was somewhere below the outcrop area, presumably in some hidden intrusive mass. Neither yields a satisfactory guide for further exploration. Howard (1959) cites geophysical observations which show that there is a mass with a density similar to that of granite under the Strafford dome, adjacent to the Elizabeth Mine on the West. Yet examination of gneissic granite in the Chester dome, 25 miles to the South gives no suggestion of a young, near-surface intrusive capable of carrying or mobilizing large quantities of sulfur and metals. The Acadian intrusives in New Hampshire and in the Barre district
Citation

APA: William F. Jenks  (1968)  Origin Of Vermont Copper Ores And Its Bearing On Exploration

MLA: William F. Jenks Origin Of Vermont Copper Ores And Its Bearing On Exploration. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1968.

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