Papers - Descriptive - Exploration on the Stillwater Chromites Deposits, Stillwater and Sweetgrass Counties, Montana (Mining Tech., Sept. 1944, T.P. 1751)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Paul T. Allsman E. W. Newman
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
12
File Size:
1734 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1949

Abstract

Trenching, sampling, and core drilling in Stillwater and Sweetgrass Counties, Mont., by the Bureau of Mines have delimited over 5,000,000 tons of chromite ore containing more than 20 per cent chromic oxide. The Benbow and Mouat-Sampson mines have been developed and are fully equipped for mining and milling 500 tons and 2000 tons a day, respectively. Introduction The Montana chromite deposits were the first to be explored under the Strategic Minerals Act of 1939. In June of that year, the Bureau of Mines started exploration by trenching, test pitting, sampling and diamond drilling, and completed the project in March 1943. The U. S. Geological Survey cooperated by mapping the geology and logging the cores. The project was to determine the extent and grade of the chromite ore and to indicate sufficient reserves to justify development and exploitation of the deposits for the national emergency. Exploration has indicated that the district contains the largest and most important reserve of chromite ore in the United States. The Benbow and Mouat-Sampson mines have been developed and a 500-ton concentrating mill has been constructed on the Benhow property and a 2000-ton mill on the Mouat-Sampson property. Concentrates were produced from the Benbow mill three months after the attack on Pearl Harbor, when the nation's major chromite supplies from foreign sources were cut off. History It has been known for 50 to 60 years that some chromite deposits existed in an east-west belt along the north escarpment of the Beartooth Mountains about 25 miles north of Yellowstone Park, but nothing was known of their size and extent until the war demand of 1917 and 1918 stimulated the search. In those years two properties in the Stillwater region were actively developed, but no shipments were made. The Benbow property was located in 1918 by a local group. The property comprised seven claims along the strike at the east end of the belt. An adit was driven several hundred feet on the Eclipse claim. The seven claims were sold to the Chromium Products Corporation of Livingston, Mont., and were subsequently patented. In 1929, an eastern group obtained an option, installed some equipment, and erected several log cabins. The "crash" in the market in 1929 caused the operators to drop their lease, and the property remained inactive until 1939, when the Bureau of Mines began its exploration. Fourteen claims were located on the Boulder River in 1918 and subsequently patented by the U. S. Chrome Corporation.
Citation

APA: Paul T. Allsman E. W. Newman  (1949)  Papers - Descriptive - Exploration on the Stillwater Chromites Deposits, Stillwater and Sweetgrass Counties, Montana (Mining Tech., Sept. 1944, T.P. 1751)

MLA: Paul T. Allsman E. W. Newman Papers - Descriptive - Exploration on the Stillwater Chromites Deposits, Stillwater and Sweetgrass Counties, Montana (Mining Tech., Sept. 1944, T.P. 1751). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1949.

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