A New Ore of Copper and its Metallurgy

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
T. Sterry Hunt
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
4
File Size:
185 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1876

Abstract

THE Jones Mine (or Johannes Mine, as it was originally called, from a former proprietor), situated near Springfield, in the township of Caernarvon, Berks County, Pennsylvania, has long been known as a large deposit of magnetic iron ore, associated with more or less copper pyrites, and with malachite and chrysocolla. It occurs in a belt of soft schistose rocks which rest upon the Laurentian gneiss of the Welsh Mountain, and to the northward are soon concealed by the unconformably overlying Mesozoic sandstone of the region. These metalliferous strata belong to the Primal slates of Rodgers, which, in many other localities in this region, include similar deposits of iron ores associated with more or less copper, and often accompanied by chloritic and argillaceous schists, and, more rarely, by serpentine and small lenticular masses of crystalline limestone. To this same horizon belong the iron ores of Boyertown, Fritz's Island, and Roudenbusch, near Reading, Wheatfield, Cornwall, and Dillsburg (all of which are found along the northern border of the Mesozoic belt of * By the kind permission of Dr. F. A. Genth, of the University of Pennsylvania, I am now enabled to append to this paper the following hitherto unpublished analyses of the Cornwall ores.
Citation

APA: T. Sterry Hunt  (1876)  A New Ore of Copper and its Metallurgy

MLA: T. Sterry Hunt A New Ore of Copper and its Metallurgy. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1876.

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