RI 4811 Investigation Of Melrose Zinc-Lead Deposit Cherokee County, Kans.

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
L. C. Brichta
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
111
File Size:
43822 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1951

Abstract

The Melrose zinc-lead. deposit is in an area of structural disturbance of sedimentary rocks in the Melrose mining district in Cherokee County, Kans., 25 miles west of Joplin, Mo., adjacent to the northwest limits of the Tri-State district. Mining and milling in the Melrose district has been sporadic and. very limited, largely due to the high cost of exploration through great thicknesses of barren rock, 350 to 440 feet overlying the ore deposits. No mining has ever been done on the Melrose zinc-lead tract, but it has been drilled extensively. The drill-hole logy indicate extensive structural deformation, silicification, and zinc-lead deposits in the Boone limestone-chert formations of the Mississippian series, which is overlain by thick-bedded Pennsylvanian shale and sandstone. Analyses of samples from Bureau of Mines drilling indicate the ore minerals are sphalerite and galena with no evident oxidation. During the period from November 2, 1949, to March 13, 1950, the Bureau of Mines investigated the deposit by churn drilling and sampling 23 holes aggregating 10,405 feet of bore. Factual data on the investigation and logs of holes drilled by private parties and the Bureau of Mines are presented in this report.
Citation

APA: L. C. Brichta  (1951)  RI 4811 Investigation Of Melrose Zinc-Lead Deposit Cherokee County, Kans.

MLA: L. C. Brichta RI 4811 Investigation Of Melrose Zinc-Lead Deposit Cherokee County, Kans.. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1951.

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