26. Iron Ore Deposits of the Menominee District, Michigan

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Carl E. Dutton Paul W. Zimmer
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
12
File Size:
637 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1968

Abstract

Iron ore in the Menominee district is mined from two iron-formations of middle Precambrian age. The older formation is present in the northeastern part; is composed mainly of hematite, magnetite, quartz, and minor silicates; and contains about 34 per cent iron. The rock has been so coarsened by meta- morphism that concentration of magnetite and hematite is feasib!e, and pellets containing more than 60 per cent iron are being produced. The older formation is also present in the southeastern part where it has 1:een only slightly metamorphosed. Ore containing more than 50 per cent iron was formerly mined from local residual concentrations of iron oxides from which silica had been sufficiently leached, or replaced by iron oxide, or affected by combinations of these processes. The younger iron-formation occurs in the western part of the district and, if unaltered, is interlayered siderite and chert. The ore in this area also contains more than 50 per cent iron and formed as local residual concentrations but in two stages. The siderite was converted to iron oxides (hematite and "limonite"), and silica was contemporaneously or subsequently removed by leaching, or replacement, or combinations of these processes.
Citation

APA: Carl E. Dutton Paul W. Zimmer  (1968)  26. Iron Ore Deposits of the Menominee District, Michigan

MLA: Carl E. Dutton Paul W. Zimmer 26. Iron Ore Deposits of the Menominee District, Michigan. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1968.

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