Manganese Ores of Russia, India, Brazil, and Chile (4d2c0b98-0d40-46ff-a733-3f8baaef6f91)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
E. C. Harder
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
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3
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170 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 4, 1917

Abstract

J. T. SINGEWALD, JR., Baltimore, Md.-I might say a word further in regard to the Miguel-Burnier district. I am sorry Mr. Harder is not here. I had hoped to be able to ask him a few questions in regard to some of the features of those deposits. This Miguel-Burnier district is the other district that I referred to that lies in the State of Minas Geraes. The interpretation that Mr. Harder gives to, these deposits is the same as that given by Harder' and Chamberlin in a previous paper, and that is that they consist of lenticular deposits of sedimentary origin in a series of rocks that also include lenses of limestone, but they seem to think that the manganese ores occur at a definite horizon and at a horizon different from the limestone. We found that the manganese ores occur at several horizons, as also do the limestone lenses, and the limestone masses are of the same shape as the manganese orebodies, so that our own feeling was that these manganese ores simply represent concentrations within the zone of oxidation formed as. a result of decomposition and replacement of this limestone. To the east of Miguel-Burnier there is a big bend in the railroad which cuts through, at right angles to the strike, this series of rocks. Here is shown very well both the local character of the limestone lenses and the local character of the manganese lenses in that, though the distance across the bend is only a couple of hundred yards, the limestone and. ,manganese lenses do not match up at all, and it also shows plainly that both occur at more than one horizon.. Consequently there is no reason why the manganese ore could not represent alterations of this limestone. The mine workings do not as yet give very definite information on this point in that they are all comparatively shallow and within what would be the zone of oxidation so that what they will grade into below that depth, we do not know. On the other hand, the character of the ore suggests that it may, represent such -a product in the zone of oxidation in that it tends to be quite earthy; whereas, if the manganese had been there originally as such it would have undergone the same metamorphism that the other rocks have undergone and one would have expected that it would have been converted into a hard manganese ore that would today stand out pretty much as do the iron ores of that same region and not have the soft, earthy texture which is a prevailing characteristic.
Citation

APA: E. C. Harder  (1917)  Manganese Ores of Russia, India, Brazil, and Chile (4d2c0b98-0d40-46ff-a733-3f8baaef6f91)

MLA: E. C. Harder Manganese Ores of Russia, India, Brazil, and Chile (4d2c0b98-0d40-46ff-a733-3f8baaef6f91). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1917.

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