RI 4076 Iron Deposits, Iron County, Utah

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
W. E. Young
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
139
File Size:
7271 KB
Publication Date:
May 1, 1947

Abstract

Iron ore occurs in abundance in Iron and Washington Counties in southwestern Utah. Outcrops are encountered over a wide area extending from Paragonah on the northeast to Bull Valley on the southwest. Outcrops also occur on the Wah Wah Range and on Blue Mountain on the north edge of Iron County. The greater concentration of known deposits occurs in and around the margins of three mountainous uplifts - Iron Mountain, Granite Mountain, and Three Peaks - comprising a belt about 3 miles wide and 23 miles long (fig. 1). This area was partly explored by the Bureau of Mines in cooperation with the Geophysical Division of the Bureau of Mines and the Geological Survey under the strategic minerals program during 1942 to 1945. The exploratory work comprised geological and topographic mapping, geophysical prospecting with a magnetometer, diamond drilling, trenching and test pitting, sampling ore exposures and old workings, and constructing and repairing roads. The Pinto-Iron Springs district is the most important known source of iron ore for the steel plants of the West. The future economic status of the Intermountain and Pacific coast regions will depend largely upon the successful development and exploitation of substantial iron-ore bodies in this district.
Citation

APA: W. E. Young  (1947)  RI 4076 Iron Deposits, Iron County, Utah

MLA: W. E. Young RI 4076 Iron Deposits, Iron County, Utah. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1947.

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