Washington D.C. Paper - On Some Peculiarities in the Occurrence of Gold In North Carolina

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
W. C. Kerr
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
2
File Size:
112 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1882

Abstract

ThE distribution of gold is obviously much wider than is Commanly supposed. Resides the usual matrices, vehicles, or associates, such as quartz, pyrite, chalcopyrite, etc., I find it occurring in quite a range of common rocks. For example, at the Rhodes mine, in Gaston County, a body of 9 to 12 feet of decoroposed, light-gray gneiss was worked together with the strings of quartz, and yielded from six to ten dollars to the ton. A mine in Moore County yields its gold mainly from a feldspathic schist. In the famous King's Mountain mine, in Gaston County, the gold is obtained not only from the seams of quartz in a blue, hydromicaceous schist, but a 60-foot ledge of grayish-blue, fine-grained, schistose limestone is quarried out bodily and sent to the stamps. It is gold-bearing throughout. In Montgomery County the singular concretionary, conglomeritic, quartzite schist, which contains Emmons's palceotrochis, is gold-bearing over wide tracts of country. This fact was noticed by Dr. Emmons. But a still more striking and significant fact is, that a large part of the gold of Montgomery, Davidson, and Randolph counties,
Citation

APA: W. C. Kerr  (1882)  Washington D.C. Paper - On Some Peculiarities in the Occurrence of Gold In North Carolina

MLA: W. C. Kerr Washington D.C. Paper - On Some Peculiarities in the Occurrence of Gold In North Carolina. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1882.

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