RI 4344 Investigation Of The Cape Rosier Zinc-Copper-Lead Mine, Hancock County, Maine

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 23
- File Size:
- 6344 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1948
Abstract
The Bureau of Mines has been investigating deposits of critical and essential minerals in the United States and Alaska since 1939. During the fall of 1942, the Bureau of Mines put down nine diamond-drill holes at the Cape Rosier zinc-copper-lead mine in Hancock County, Maine, that aggregated 2,883 feet of bore. These holes supplemented 13 holes, aggregating. 5,501 feet, put down on the property about 2 years earlier by the St. Joseph Lead Co. Veins of mixed sulfides were intersected in 15 of the holes drilled. Beneficiation tests were made on samples of ore obtained from old dumps. Zinc-copper-lead sulfides occur at the Cape Rosier mine as lenses in a zone of altered agglomerate beneath and between a series of diorite sills. The mineralized zone strikes F. 17° E. and dips southeast. Between July 1881 and September 1883 the mine produced about 10,000 tons of ore reported to have contained 20 percent zinc, 2.8 percent copper, and some lead. The crude ore was hand-sorted, and some. 3,000 tons were reported shipped.
Citation
APA:
(1948) RI 4344 Investigation Of The Cape Rosier Zinc-Copper-Lead Mine, Hancock County, MaineMLA: RI 4344 Investigation Of The Cape Rosier Zinc-Copper-Lead Mine, Hancock County, Maine. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1948.