RI 4412 Investigation Of Black Mountain Beryl Deposit, Oxford County, Maine

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
E. E. Maillot
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
18
File Size:
3017 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1949

Abstract

In 1943, diamond drilling by the Bureau of Mines, comprising 11 holes which totaled 1,295.6 feet, showed that the pegmatite at Black Mountain consisted of shallow lenses in interbedded biotite-quartz-schist and impure quartzite. The average thickness of the pegmatite was 9.7 feet. Mineralization had a zonal arrangement. Beryl was most abundant near the footwall contact of the pegmatite. The average estimated beryl content of the pegmatite exposed at the surface was 0.81 percent, and the highest content of any pegmatite area was 1.75 percent. Other economic minerals were scrap mica, feldspar, spodumene, and lepidolite. Representative samples of the Black Mountain deposit failed to yield high-grade boryl concentrates by straight flotation owing to the presence of considerable spodumene. By employing heavy medium separation to remove the spodumene, 75.4 percent of the. BeO wan recovered in a flotation concentrate assaying 10.4 percent BeO.
Citation

APA: E. E. Maillot  (1949)  RI 4412 Investigation Of Black Mountain Beryl Deposit, Oxford County, Maine

MLA: E. E. Maillot RI 4412 Investigation Of Black Mountain Beryl Deposit, Oxford County, Maine. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1949.

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