Pittsburgh Paper - The Cornwall Iron-Ore Mines, Lebanon County, Pa.

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
E. V. d’Invilliers
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
33
File Size:
1812 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1886

Abstract

The position of these magnetic ore-mines, with reference to the county-seat, is shown in Fig. 1. They are situated on the south margin of the Great Valley, five miles south of Lebanon, and about midway between Reading on the Schuylkill River and Harrisburg on the Susquehanna River, in three prominent, contiguous hills, standing in front of the Mesozoic red shale arid sandstone hill country of northern Lancaster and southern Lebanon counties, and overlooking the great limestone plain to the north. The three hills, named respectively Big, Middle, and Grassy Hills, and separated from each other by two branches of Furnace Creek, range in a nearly east and west direction for a distance of about one mile. Their summits are respectively 870, 715, and 700 feet above tide. The railroad line opposite the base of Middle Hill is 575 feet above tide at Cornwall and 471 feet at Lebauon. These features are all distinctly illustrated in the contour-line map accompanying this paper, but are made still more clear in the relief. map, Fig. 2, comprising, as it does, about six square miles of territory contiguous to the ore-mines. This is a photographic plate of a model made by Mr. A. E. Lehman, from surveys of my own and Mr. W. F. Shunk. The model was built in layers of cardboard, each layer representing one 10-foot contour-carve line. The scale was the same as the original map, 400 feet= 1 inch, without any vertical exaggeration. The lowest contour-line is 530 feet above ocean level; the highest, 1075 feet. The center of the model was made the focusing-point of the view, which was taken—according to scale—51/2 miles north from and 24 miles above the focusing-point, looking southward. When first mined in the last century these hills exhibited smoothlyrounded surfaces, composed of soft weathered ore of great parity, beneath which lay the great mass of hard ore, constituting the whole
Citation

APA: E. V. d’Invilliers  (1886)  Pittsburgh Paper - The Cornwall Iron-Ore Mines, Lebanon County, Pa.

MLA: E. V. d’Invilliers Pittsburgh Paper - The Cornwall Iron-Ore Mines, Lebanon County, Pa.. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1886.

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