Ozark Lead- And Zinc-Deposits: Their Genesis, Localization, And Migration.

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
CHARLES R. KETES
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
48
File Size:
1939 KB
Publication Date:
Feb 1, 1909

Abstract

I. INTRODUCTORY. INDUSTRIALLY, the most important service that geological science can now render to mining in the Upper Mississippi leadand zinc-fields is to devise some practical scheme whereby the productive ore-belts may be located with greater certainty than they have been in the past. Up to the present time there has been little service of this kind, and in spite of all that has been worked out concerning the geologic features of the region, and notwithstanding all that has been written about these ore-deposits, this particular phase of the subject has been, for some reason or other, the very one that has received the least consideration. The neglect by geologists in this respect has been all but complete. The following notes are suggestive of some practical solutions to the problems presented. As here suggested, the geologic relationships of the ore-bodies were surmised some years ago, though somewhat vaguely perhaps. No opportunity for securing critical data appeared until recent investigations of a private character were undertaken, which bad in view the extensive prospecting of undeveloped areas. Fresh from rather wide experiences of a decade in the principal mining-regions of four continents, and after a lenstrum's residence among the chief mining-camps of the West and of Mexico, under conditions which measured geologic hypotheses in meters and rigidly tested their values in, terms of dollars, the recent return to the Joplin field and a new survey of its ore-conditions were fraught with somewhat unexpected results. Aspects of the ore-deposition were presented of which previously there was no hint. Ten years' absence from the district had tended greatly to clarify former hazy impressions. It enabled many features, then only dimly outlined, to be considered more nearly in their true perspective and in their real relationships to their surroundings. It permitted a great mass of details collected a dozen years before in connection with the work of the Missouri Geological Survey to be viewed under new light and to
Citation

APA: CHARLES R. KETES  (1909)  Ozark Lead- And Zinc-Deposits: Their Genesis, Localization, And Migration.

MLA: CHARLES R. KETES Ozark Lead- And Zinc-Deposits: Their Genesis, Localization, And Migration.. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1909.

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