RI 4598 Investigation Of The Oronogo-Webb City-Duenweg Zinc-Lead District, Jasper County, Mo.

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 97
- File Size:
- 14915 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1949
Abstract
The Oronogo-Webb City-Duenweg district is in the northeastern part of the Tri-State zinc and, lead field. Its metal-mining history dates from the early 1850's. For some years prior to 1918 it ranked as the leading producing area of the entire Tri-State field, but by 1920 most of its mines had been abandoned and allowed to fill with water. Its mine operators had-been attracted, to the newly discovered and richer deposits around Picher, Okla. In 1943, the Orenogo Mutual Mining Co. was exploiting the Oronogo Circle deposit in the northern end of the district, and the Federal Mining & Smelting Co. was preparing to mine on its holdings in the southern part near Duenweg. The area between these two operating units ranked as the largest single block of ore reserves under water in the Tri-State field. In 1942, engineers of the Bureau of Mines, in collaboration with the William Stewart Engineering Co. of Joplin, collected all available mine maps, mine reports, and logs of old drill holes in the inundated area. From a careful study an appraisal of these data, the reserves in the block were calculated at 20,647,800 tons of ore containing 606,440 tons of 60-percent zinc concentrates and 46,970 tons of 80-percent lead concentrates. The ore was estimated to contain 1.76 percent recoverable zinc and 0.18 percent recoverable lead.
Citation
APA:
(1949) RI 4598 Investigation Of The Oronogo-Webb City-Duenweg Zinc-Lead District, Jasper County, Mo.MLA: RI 4598 Investigation Of The Oronogo-Webb City-Duenweg Zinc-Lead District, Jasper County, Mo.. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1949.