MLA 10-81 - Mineral Resources Of The Domeland Addition (5207) And Woodpecker (5206) Rare II Areas, Tulare And Kern Counties, California

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
James M. Spear
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
32
File Size:
7661 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1981

Abstract

The U.S. Bureau of Mines conducted a mineral survey of the Domeland Addition (5207) and Woodpecker (5206) RARE II areas during the summer of 1979. These study areas were examined to determine the presence or absence of mineral resources and reserves and where possible, to estimate values. The study areas are 9 air mi northeast of Kernville, California, and encompass 47,400 acres of primarily granitic rocks of the Sierra Nevada batholith with some scattered exposures of older metasedimentary, volcanic, and metavolcanic rocks. These other rock units partially surround the exposed batholith in the Domeland Wilderness and consist mostly of late Paleozoic quartzites, mica schists, marbles, and meta-volcanics, Mesozoic quartz diorite and gabbro intrusives, and local Tertiary basalt and andesite flows.
Citation

APA: James M. Spear  (1981)  MLA 10-81 - Mineral Resources Of The Domeland Addition (5207) And Woodpecker (5206) Rare II Areas, Tulare And Kern Counties, California

MLA: James M. Spear MLA 10-81 - Mineral Resources Of The Domeland Addition (5207) And Woodpecker (5206) Rare II Areas, Tulare And Kern Counties, California. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1981.

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