Bridgeport Paper - The Nickel Mine at Lancaster Gap. Pennsylvania, and the Pyrrhotite Deposits at Anthony's Nose, on the Hudson (see Discussion, p. 883)

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 16
- File Size:
- 924 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1895
Abstract
The use of nickel-steel has directed increasing interest of late towards the deposits of nickel, and at the same time the parallel advance in our knowledge of the basic igneous rocks has rendered these deposits a subject of important geological inquiry. Investigations have led to some views, more or less new, on the igneous origin of certain ores, which, though not universally accepted, have a growing number of adherents. In Europe, the mines in Norway have been especially suggestive subjects of study, and others somewhat less generally known have also added their testimony; while in this country the great economic importance and scientific interest of the developments in the Sudbury district of Canada, have furnished the principal texts for the discourses that have appeared among us. The purpose of the present paper is to set forth these views through the medium of one interesting ore-body, of which but little has been written ; and, by the description of another, to place in contrast two different geological associations in which nickeliferous pyrrhotite occurs, and to indicate a generalization, based upon these different geological characters, and justified by the experience so far gained. To Prof. J. H. L. Vogt, of Christiania, Norway, is due the chief credit for the revival of interest in the geology of nickel. His important contributions* of recent date have made generally available
Citation
APA:
(1895) Bridgeport Paper - The Nickel Mine at Lancaster Gap. Pennsylvania, and the Pyrrhotite Deposits at Anthony's Nose, on the Hudson (see Discussion, p. 883)MLA: Bridgeport Paper - The Nickel Mine at Lancaster Gap. Pennsylvania, and the Pyrrhotite Deposits at Anthony's Nose, on the Hudson (see Discussion, p. 883). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1895.