RI 4862 Bumpus Pegmatite Deposit, Oxford County, Maine

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 24
- File Size:
- 7855 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1952
Abstract
In October 1949 the College Park Branch of the Mining Division instituted a survey of the New England pegmatites. Many of the New England pegmatite deposits were superficially examined, and the Bumpus quarry in Albany, Oxford County, Maine (see fig. 1), was selected for a diamond-drill exploratory-development project to supply information for developing more economical mining methods and no increasing production of beryl and other scarce minerals associated with pegmatitic intrusives. The Bumpus quarry has been mined intermittently by three operators since it was opened in 1927. At the time of drilling, the vein or dike (see figs. 2 and 3) had been mined to a depth of 60 feet for a strike length of 280 feet. The dike averages 40 feet in thickness and dips 50 degrees southeast. The Bureau of Mines drilled seven diamond-drill holes between September 27 and November 27, 1950. These holes showed that the dike persists for at least 350 feet to the east and probably 200 foot to the west of the present excavation. The drilling also indicated that the dip, as exposed at the surface, continued unchanged at 500 to a depth of at least 50 foot below the pit. The dike was not delineated, although it fingered out as pegmatite interbanded with Granite, diorite, and gneiss in diamond-drill hole B-4, approximately 250 feet west of the pit. Further drilling will be necessary to find the extent of this pegmatite dike and to determine the safest and most economic mining system.
Citation
APA:
(1952) RI 4862 Bumpus Pegmatite Deposit, Oxford County, MaineMLA: RI 4862 Bumpus Pegmatite Deposit, Oxford County, Maine. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1952.