RI 4642 Investigation Of The Vicksburg Lead-Zinc Mine Beaver County, Utah

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 34
- File Size:
- 2500 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1950
Abstract
The Vicksburg mining property lies in the southeastern foothills of the Star mining district, Beaver County, Utah (fig. 1). Within a few miles of the Vicksburg mine, lying in a semicircle from south to northwest, are such past producers of lead-silver ores as the Moscow, Hoosier Boy, Red Warrior, Wild. Bill, Harrington-Hickory, and many others. Farther to the north, in the San Francisco district, are the famous Horn Silver and Cactus mines. The formation at the Vicksburg property consists of interbedded limestone, shale, and dolomitic limestone. These beds have been metamorphosed by the intrusion of irregular masses of porphyritic igneous rocks grading from quartz-monzonite to granodiorite. Ore deposition is in north-trending fissures of sheeted zones, contact metamorphic in type. These depositions were subsequently altered to gossan. A preliminary investigation of the Vicksburg property involving surveying, mapping, and sampling was made by W. A. Young and F. H. Gunnell, engineers of the Bureau of Mines, in the fall of 1946. As a result of the investigation, a project was set up to investigate the possibility of ore occurrence at greater depth on the fissures under the mineralized zone by diamond drilling.
Citation
APA:
(1950) RI 4642 Investigation Of The Vicksburg Lead-Zinc Mine Beaver County, UtahMLA: RI 4642 Investigation Of The Vicksburg Lead-Zinc Mine Beaver County, Utah. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1950.