The Gold Placers Of Antioquia, Republic Of Colombia, South America. (30edd8af-0333-4a6b-a430-6e4167748887)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
M. H. De Hora
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
4
File Size:
188 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 7, 1913

Abstract

(Butte Meeting, August, 1913.) IN giving my opinion of the importance of Colombia as a field for investment for those interested' in mining for the precious metals, I must begin by quoting Sir Clement Markham, who, in one of his presidential addresses to the Royal Geographical Society of Great Britain, called the attention of its members to the fact that " although Colombia is the least known and least developed of the South American republics, it is far and away the richest mineral country of them all." This to American investors is extremely interesting, as the country is the most accessible of all the South American republics from the United States. .Almost all of the gold shipped by the Spaniards from Madre de Dios, now Colon, came from Colombia, and statistics from the Mint at Medellin, the capital of the Department of Antioquia, go to show that the . total production of the precious metals of Colombia, dating from the Spanish conquest in the fifteenth century to the present time, aggregates the enormous total of $700,000,000. Of this amount, nearly 70 per cent. represents gold obtained from the placers of the Republic, more than one-half of which came from the Department of Antioquia, the balance, being divided between the placers of the Choco and the rest of the Republic. The remaining 30 per cent. of the $700,000,000 represents the silver and gold obtained from the quartz mines, the silver greatly predominating. A glance at the map of Colombia shows the territory somewhat in the shape of an outspread human left hand extended palm downwards on the paper, with the wrist adjoining the Republic of Ecuador, the bones of the hand, fingers, and thumb representing the divisions of the great Andean mountain chain known as the Cordilleras of Colombia. The first finger represents the Eastern Cordillera, with the thumb as the extension to the Nevada de Santa Maria, forming
Citation

APA: M. H. De Hora  (1913)  The Gold Placers Of Antioquia, Republic Of Colombia, South America. (30edd8af-0333-4a6b-a430-6e4167748887)

MLA: M. H. De Hora The Gold Placers Of Antioquia, Republic Of Colombia, South America. (30edd8af-0333-4a6b-a430-6e4167748887). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1913.

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