RI 4659 Investigation Of Stange And Byrnes Heirs Manganese Mines, Bland And Giles Counties, Va.

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 43
- File Size:
- 7096 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1950
Abstract
The Stange and Byrnes Heirs manganese mines, adjoining properties in Bland and Giles Counties, Va., have produced at least 20,000 long tons of concentrates containing 8,000 long tons of manganese. They were selected as the site for a strategic-mineral development project because of the existence of geologic possibilities for extensions of the known ore body. In plan, the long dimension of the ore body parallels the axis of a major anticline. Localization apparently is due to longitudinal and transverse fracturing incident to two-way folding. That the manganese oxides were deposited by downward-moving solutions is suggested by the fact that mineable concentrations are confined to a coarse, porous sandstone under-lain by impervious silt and clay. Bureau of Mines project work began on January 15, 1941, and was completed on April 23. The work sampling the faces of the pit, bulldozer trenching, and churn drilling. Pit sampling consisted of 132 channel samples usually 5 feet long and taken at 20-foot intervals. Seventeen trenches aggregating some 4,500 feet in length were dug by the bulldozer. Trenches averaged 12.6 feet in width and 5 feet in depth. A total of 1,978 feet of churn drilling was done in 33 holes. In preparation for churn drilling it was necessary to construct roads to 21 of the 33 sites. A total of 2,867 linear feet of road averaging 13 feet in width was built.
Citation
APA:
(1950) RI 4659 Investigation Of Stange And Byrnes Heirs Manganese Mines, Bland And Giles Counties, Va.MLA: RI 4659 Investigation Of Stange And Byrnes Heirs Manganese Mines, Bland And Giles Counties, Va.. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1950.