RI 4646 Investigation Of The Fluorite Deposits Of The Dike And Eaton Veins, Crittenden County, Ky.

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Xavier B. Starnes
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
27
File Size:
1792 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1950

Abstract

The Dike and Eaton veins in Crittenden County, Ky. (fig. 1), are along northwesterly trending relief fractures that lie between two northeastward striking major faults - the Moore Hill and- the Levias, in Crittenden County, Ky. The veins contain small, narrow, irregular ore bodies of fluorspar with subordinate quantities of sphalerite and galena. Gravel fluorspar was found on the surface in the Eaton vein, and open-cut mining was in progress on the W. M. Conyer property about 1900. Discovery of fluorspar in the Dike vein came much later, about 1933, on the W. H. LaRue tract, but the principal production on the Dike vein started after the discovery of gravel spar in 1938 on the land of the P. J. Gilless estate. Production from the Eaton vein was estimated at 9,400 tons and that from the Dike vein at 15,700 tons, a total of 25,100 tons. A large part of this production was gravel fluorspar from within 50 foot of the surface. Beneath the gravel spar the veins are very narrow, averaging 2 to 2.5 feet in width, and the ore shoots are small. The deepest mine level was 140 feet below the surface, and the deepest shaft 150 foot. Orb was concentrated by log washer or sent unwashed to custom mills at Marion, Ky. about 6 miles distant.
Citation

APA: Xavier B. Starnes  (1950)  RI 4646 Investigation Of The Fluorite Deposits Of The Dike And Eaton Veins, Crittenden County, Ky.

MLA: Xavier B. Starnes RI 4646 Investigation Of The Fluorite Deposits Of The Dike And Eaton Veins, Crittenden County, Ky.. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1950.

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