Papers - Magnetic Methods - An Instance of Abnormal Magnetic Polarization in South Africa, Together with a Graphic Method for Determining Effects of Magnetic Pole Distribution (Contrib. 79, with discussion)

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 12
- File Size:
- 387 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1940
Abstract
In discussing the problem of abnormal magnetic polarization, C. A. Heilandl† emphasized the unfortunate fact that our knowledge of the geological and physical conditions relating to such occurrences is very limited and that a more detailed insight into their physical causes would be extremely valuable for interpreting measured anomalies. He also pointed out that to arrive at quantitative physical formulas that would express the conditions that cause abnormal polarization many more occurrences of the kind would have to be recorded. The first part of this paper is a contribution to such descriptions. Abnormal Magnetic Polarization in South Africa The occurrence was mapped in the course of a magnetometric survey carried out about 70 miles to the east of Johannesburg and east of the Witwatersrand gold field, for the purpose of detecting the position of the suboutcrop of certain magnetite-bearing shales that occur in the lower portion of the Witwatersrand system of sediments, shales whose position in section in relation to the ore-bearing members of the same system of sediments are known. In this case the shales are covered by younger strata several hundred feet thick. Lines of magnetometric traverse were run at right angles to the strike for a strongly magnetic body. This body is a shale zone in the Witwatersrand sediments and has a strike of N.20°E. (magnetic) and dips 15" to the east. The field work was done by a vertical intensity field balance (A. Schmidt principle). The plotting is done in such a way that the sign is reversed from that usually employed in the northern hemisphere, so that a positive profile is obtained in abnormal cases while the same conditions in the northern hemisphere would give a negative one. This method of recording should be kept in mind in reading what follows.
Citation
APA:
(1940) Papers - Magnetic Methods - An Instance of Abnormal Magnetic Polarization in South Africa, Together with a Graphic Method for Determining Effects of Magnetic Pole Distribution (Contrib. 79, with discussion)MLA: Papers - Magnetic Methods - An Instance of Abnormal Magnetic Polarization in South Africa, Together with a Graphic Method for Determining Effects of Magnetic Pole Distribution (Contrib. 79, with discussion). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1940.