Papers - Gravitational Methods - A New Gravimeter for Ore Prospecting (T. P. 953)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Helmer Heldstrom
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
23
File Size:
863 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1940

Abstract

Gravity surveying with the torsion balance or the pendulum for ore prospecting purposes has generally not been considered practical or even possible. It is the intention of this paper to show that a fast and sensitive gravimeter can be very useful in ore prospecting, as an auxiliary to the electrical and magnetic instruments. A number of gravimeters have been constructed and put in practical use in the last seven or eight years; for instance, by Ising, Lejay-Holweck, Haalck, Hartley, Thyssen, Noergaard, the Humble Oil and Refining Co. and the Gulf Production Co. Their main application, apart from their use for geodetic surveys, has been for structure mapping in oil prospecting. There is no record that any of them have been used for ore prospecting. About the middle of 1934 the Boliden Mining Co., in Sweden, began experiments in constructing a static gravity meter sensitive enough for ore prospecting. Calculations and considerations that will be discussed later in this paper showed that this would necessitate an accuracy in the measurements of 0.1 milligal—roughly, one ten-millionth part of the total force of gravity. The first successful practical field tests of the instrument were made in January 1936. About the middle of 1937 the Boliden gravimeter was perfected. Ore prospecting with this instrument is now regular practice in Sweden, especially for the testing of indications given by geoelectric and magnetic methods. Gravity Anomalies that May Be Expected from Ore Bodies According to Newton's law, a mass M attracts the unit mass in a distance r with the force , GM where G = the gravitational constant = 6.68 . 10-8 c.g.s units. In the c.g.s., or centimeter-gram-second, system the force of attraction is expressed in the unit "dyne," which has the physical dimension c.g.s.-2 and denotes the force needed to accelerate the unit mass in one second to
Citation

APA: Helmer Heldstrom  (1940)  Papers - Gravitational Methods - A New Gravimeter for Ore Prospecting (T. P. 953)

MLA: Helmer Heldstrom Papers - Gravitational Methods - A New Gravimeter for Ore Prospecting (T. P. 953). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1940.

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