Geology Of The Zaruma Gold District Of Ecuador

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Paul Billingsley
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
21
File Size:
721 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 10, 1925

Abstract

IN THEIR course across Ecuador, the Andes fail to show the mineral wealth with which they abound in Peru, Bolivia, and Chile. This may well be due merely to the concealment of recent volcanic ash and dense tropical jungle, but at any rate Ecuador has lacked the stimulation to development and progress afforded to the southern countries by the mines of Cerro de Pasco, Potosi, etc. 1 There is, however; in Ecuador, near its southern border, one mining district that, in recent years under North American management, has become a steady producer of mineral. wealth and. a community in which the sanitary and mechanical elements of modern life are displayed, for ;the first time, to the Ecuadorians of the lowland forests. The mining district of Zaruma is .situated in the province of El Oro, near the southwestern corner of Ecuador, about 50 km. (31 mi.) from the coast. Pizarro's first landing on the mainland was at Tumbez, at the mouth of the river that drains the Zaruma area; and the gold so abundantly found in this Indian town was soon traced to its source. In 1549, Mercadillo, one of the original (band, reached Zaruma, having worked his way up-stream through canyons that .are now regarded as impassable. The Spaniards proved themselves efficient prospectors, finding practically every orebody in the district as yet discovered; and, working
Citation

APA: Paul Billingsley  (1925)  Geology Of The Zaruma Gold District Of Ecuador

MLA: Paul Billingsley Geology Of The Zaruma Gold District Of Ecuador. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1925.

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