Pittsburg Paper - Vein-Walls (see Discussion 1053)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
T. A. Rickard
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
50
File Size:
2366 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1897

Abstract

From time immemorial the fissure-vein has been held the simplest type of ore-deposit. The prominence given to it by Cotta and his disciples, from their study of the mines of the Erzgebirge, is impressed upon technical literature; and, in consequence, the ores which carry the valuable metals have been supposed to occur mainly in fissures, cleaving the rocks in diverse directions, and the noblest type of vein has been deemed that which cut across the country independent of its structure, whether evidenced as bedding, foliation or cleavage, and which was identified with rents produced in the rocky crust of the earth. As so conceived, the vein was a fissure filled with ore, extending through the country for a varying distance, and continued downward to a depth more or less proportionate to its longitudinal extent. The vein-material was bounded by an encasement of rock, and those immediate surfaces which limited it on either aide were called " walls." These primary conceptions have become modified by the experience of modern mining in widely separated regions. The study of lode-formations has led to the recognition of notable departures from the supposed normal structure of the veins of Saxony and Cornwall, the two classic homes of early economic geology. Typically the walls of a vein are conceived as parallel rockplanes enclosing the ore; the upper one being called the " hanging-," and the lower the "foot-wall."* Walls are rarely alike. Even where a vein traverses a homogeneons formation, such as a massive crystalline rock, it is usually found that the surface which bounds it underneath
Citation

APA: T. A. Rickard  (1897)  Pittsburg Paper - Vein-Walls (see Discussion 1053)

MLA: T. A. Rickard Pittsburg Paper - Vein-Walls (see Discussion 1053). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1897.

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