RI 4539 Investigation Of The Cartersville Manganese District, Bartow County, Ga.

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 49
- File Size:
- 12650 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1949
Abstract
Manganese-oxide minerals occur in irregular pockets distributed through the residual clays of the Cartersville district, which lies 45 miles north-west of Atlanta in Bartow County, Ga. The district produces, or has produced, limonite, barite, specular hematite, ochre, ferruginous manganese, manganiferous iron are, as well as manganese. Bureau of Mines engineers have visited the district on three occasions - in December 1939, February 1941, and October 1942. During the visit of February 1941, 80 tons of samples of manganese-bearing clays were taken from seven properties for ore-dressing tests, which were conducted at the Bureau of Mines laboratory at Rolla, Mo. The. October 1942 visit was for the purpose of reappraising the district in the light of knowledge gained from the ore-dressing studies and to prepare a plan for the district's development. Exploratory drilling was begun in March l943 and was continued until June 1945. Nine properties were explored that, roughly follow a line beginning near Cartersville and extend to a point 2 miles northeast of the village of White. The work consisted of bulldozer trenching, rotary bucket churn drilling, sampling, and analytical determinations. The manganese district is 18 miles long with a maximum width of 7 miles at Cartersville, which lies at the center of the district. The work of the Bureau was confined to the northern half of the district between Cartersville and Pine Log. The properties explored comprise but a small portion of the Potential producing area.
Citation
APA:
(1949) RI 4539 Investigation Of The Cartersville Manganese District, Bartow County, Ga.MLA: RI 4539 Investigation Of The Cartersville Manganese District, Bartow County, Ga.. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1949.