RI 5986 Reconnaissance Studies Of Alaskan Beach Sands, Eastern Gulf Of Alaska ? Summary

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Bruce I. Thomas
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
45
File Size:
6079 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1962

Abstract

Reconnaissance studies of beach sands along the eastern part of the Gulf of Alaska were conducted by the Bureau of Mines to determine if any of these coastal areas warranted investigations as possible sources of valuable minerals. Because of difficult access and limited transportation facilities only a minimum of sampling, surveying, and camping equipment is utilized to obtain spot samples from key areas as well as information indicating the location, size, and character of the deposits. Such data were obtained from beaches located along approximately 247 miles of the Gulf of Alaska coastline during parts of the 1957 and 1958 field seasons. A total of 201 3-inch-diameter auger holes, spaced roughly at 1 mile intervals, were bored by hand methods to depths ranging from 3 feet to 27 feet; also 33 shovel samples were collected from selected localities. Samples were reduced to a rough concentrate in the field by panning; the rough concentrates were shipped to the Bureau of Mines laboratory at Juneau for further concentration and for petrographic and chemical analyses. Particular attention was given to the heavy-mineral content of the concentrates, although the types and relative amounts of rock-forming minerals were also determined. The reconnaissance indicated that, generally, the valuable mineral content of the beach deposits was too low to be of further interest except in the vicinity of Yakutat and Lituya Bays where erratic but possibly significant concentrations of magnetite and/or ilmenite were found. At Yakutat, about 20 miles of beachline extending southeasterly from Ocean Cape, yielded samplas containing from 1 pound to over 300 pounds of iron and from a trace to over 100 pounds of titanium dioxide (TiO2) per cubic yard of beach material. However, the higher grade samples represented local concentrations of minor importance. The general tenor of the Yakutat beach, as indicated by the airthmetical average of 27 auger-hole samples, is about 35 pounds of iron and 20.5 pounds of titanium dioxide per cubic yard of beach material. Ilmenite is the predominant heavy mineral of the beach deposits in the vicinity of Lituya Bay, but it was found in concentrations only in limited areas near the
Citation

APA: Bruce I. Thomas  (1962)  RI 5986 Reconnaissance Studies Of Alaskan Beach Sands, Eastern Gulf Of Alaska ? Summary

MLA: Bruce I. Thomas RI 5986 Reconnaissance Studies Of Alaskan Beach Sands, Eastern Gulf Of Alaska ? Summary. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1962.

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