New York Paper - The White Knob Copper-Deposits, Mackay. Idaho

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 28
- File Size:
- 1607 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1908
Abstract
PAGE I. Introduction,.......269 11. Topogmphical Features,.....270 III. Geological Relations of the Mineralized Area,.272 1. Structural Features,.....272 2. Occurrence of the Copper,....274 3. Granite-Contacts,.......274 IV. Descriptions of the Rocks,.....274 1. Granite,........274 2. Limestone,.......276 3. Porphyritic Eruptions,.....278 (a) Quartz-Porphyry,.....278 (b) Trachyte-Porphyry,.....280 V. Contact Phenomena,......285 1. Comparative Immunity of the Limestone, . 285 2. Contact Phenomena in the Quartz-Porphyry,.... 285 3. The Form and Distribution of the Ore-Bodies,290 VI. Method of Deposition,......293 I. Introduction. The White Knob copper-deposits are situated about three miles south of Mackay, on the Salmon River branch of the Oregon Short Line Railroad, in Custer county, Idaho. An outline-map of this district is given in Fig. 1. The deposits have been known and spasmodically worked for many years, and a total of over 3.5 miles of tunnels, shafts and other workings has been driven with a view to their development. These extensive excavations have exposed the deposits sufficiently to permit a careful geological examination. The peculiar features which give special interest to this paper are the branching, tree-like form of the ore-bodies; the absence of zones of secondary enrichment in the partly oxidized pyritic deposits, and the fact that while the deposits are associated in a general way with the contact of an eruptive rock with limeetone, which it penetrates, the garnetization has taken place not in the limestone, as is the usual case, but in the igneous
Citation
APA:
(1908) New York Paper - The White Knob Copper-Deposits, Mackay. IdahoMLA: New York Paper - The White Knob Copper-Deposits, Mackay. Idaho. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1908.