What Is A Pipe-Vein?

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Rossiter W. Raymond
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
6
File Size:
281 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1878

Abstract

(Read at the Amenia Meeting, October, 1877.) THE term "pipe-vein" has recently been applied in this country to certain deposits of lead ore in magnesian limestone. The use of the term has been twofold. It has been revived as a term found in textbooks on mineral veins, with the implied or declared assertion that the ore-deposits thus named in this country are similar to those which have borne the title abroad. It has also been advanced as an appropriate name for a new class of deposits, even if such a class had not previously been recognized. In either case, the assumption is that pipe-veins form a group or class by themselves, and are not merely interior and subordinate features in larger deposits. The peculiar mining law of the United States, which regards " the vein," whatever that may be, as the basis of title, lends a special interest to these claims. But the object of this paper is rather to discuss the subject from the standpoint of geology and technical literature. I shall briefly answer two questions : (1) What are pipe-veins as described in technical literature? and (2) Is the name appropriate or necessary for a new class of deposits ? The term "pipe-ore," as applied, for instance, to irregular, cylin-
Citation

APA: Rossiter W. Raymond  (1878)  What Is A Pipe-Vein?

MLA: Rossiter W. Raymond What Is A Pipe-Vein?. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1878.

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