The Ta-Yeh Iron-Ore Deposits, Hu-Pei Province, China.

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
C. M. Weld
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
11
File Size:
429 KB
Publication Date:
Oct 1, 1912

Abstract

(Cleveland Meeting, October, 1912.) IN the course of my professional work in China during the fall of 1907, I had an opportunity to visit the iron-ore mines at Ta-yeh in Hu-pei province (long. 114° 50' E., lat. 30° 20' N.). It occurs to me that a rescript and discussion of my notes taken at that time should be of interest, particularly as supplementing the exceedingly interesting recent paper-of Thomas T: Read on The Mineral Production and Resources of China.1 Ta-yeh is situated near the right bank of the Yangtze river. The mines are at an average distance of about 16 miles from the river-port Shi-hui-yao, which in turn is some 70 miles S-E. of Hankow. The ores are shipped to the works of the Han-Yeh-P'ing Iron & Coal Co. at Hanyang, as also very largely to the Japanese government iron- and steel-works at Wakamatsu, Japan. Smaller quantities have been exported to the Pacific coast of the United States. These ore-deposits have been briefly noticed in a number of publications, but, so far as I know, Mr. Read's description, in his chapter on the iron-ores of the Chinese Empire,2 contains the first attempt to define their geological character. In his more recent paper Mr. Read follows very closely the text of his earlier description. To quote briefly from the recent paper, he says : " The iron-ores at Ta-yeh . . . . lie along the contact between a marble and an intrusive body of a dark-gray syenitic rock." He refers to a figure which exhibits in plan, but not in section, the relative positions of the syenite, ore-bodies, and limestone. The contact is seen to trend approximately E-W., with the syenite on the north and the limestone on the south. " The syenite lies to the north of the marble, and a few miles farther north the marble again' appears, iron-ore again being present along the contact." No litho- 1 Bulletin Bulletin No. 63, March, 1912, pp. 293 to 343. 2 The Iron Ore Resources of the World', vol. ii., p. 913 (Stockholm 1910).
Citation

APA: C. M. Weld  (1912)  The Ta-Yeh Iron-Ore Deposits, Hu-Pei Province, China.

MLA: C. M. Weld The Ta-Yeh Iron-Ore Deposits, Hu-Pei Province, China.. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1912.

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