Atlanta, Ga Paper - The Geological Structure of the Western Part of the Vermillion Range, Minnesota

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 55
- File Size:
- 3685 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1896
Abstract
The most important area of the so-called Keewatin rocks of northern Minnesota is that which runs westerly from Lake Saganaga, near the national boundary, and finally disappears beneath the drift (or has not been farther traced), in the neighborhood of Vermilion Lake. With this belt we have a general acquaintance, extending back some four years. During the past year we have had the opportunity of studying in considerable detail a small part of it, embracing an area of about 12 square miles on the south and east shores of Vermilion Lake. In this paper we desire to record our observations and conclusions, which seem to us important. II.—Literature. Outside the Minnesota Geological Survey, the list of the investigators who have studied the geology of the Vermilion Lake area is not long. Whittlesey, in 1876,* mentioned the occurrence, in the area about Vermilion Lake, of rocks resembling the Canadian Laurentian. Chester,? in 1884, described the iron-ore at Vermilion Lake as occurring in connection with jasper and quartzite, intimately bedded with the country-rock, chiefly sericite schist, and standing in a nearly vertical attitude. The Vermilion iron-bearing rocks, and those of the Mesabi range, he says, are of the same age.
Citation
APA:
(1896) Atlanta, Ga Paper - The Geological Structure of the Western Part of the Vermillion Range, MinnesotaMLA: Atlanta, Ga Paper - The Geological Structure of the Western Part of the Vermillion Range, Minnesota. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1896.