Sampling and Estimating Ore Deposits - Methods of Sampling and Estimating Lead-silver Ore - Sampling and Estimating Cordilleran Lead-silver Limestone Replacement Deposits

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 11
- File Size:
- 503 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1925
Abstract
In the science of evolution of the species, there is a law which, simply stated, avers that the history of the individual repeats the history of the race. Similarly, if unassisted by the experience of others, each SUCcessful engineer would perfect and develop his methods and technique from the rough grab sample up to the carefully taken, recorded and studied samples and observations which now determine and decide the expenditure of the large sums required for modern mining. Hence real progress results from the interchange of experience, as in that way the entire experience of the profession can be made available to every engineer. The literature of this subject is already voluminous, but some progress has been made in the gathering of data and in their compilation or presentation. More Romance than Developed Ore in Limestone Deposits In certain types of deposits, methods little known 25 yews ago have been developed, perfected and standardized to a degree that lifts sampling from the field of manual labor to the plane of an applied science; for instance, the modern methods of estimating the so-called porphyry coppers. With some types of orebodies, we have become familiar, and sometimes on too easy speaking terms, with millions of tons of ore in reserve and tens of millions of dollars; while with others even these once marvelous figures sink into insignificance before the array of ciphers that are presented. .In such company, the average limestone replacement orebody is entirely out of place, for its reserves seldom reach a figure to arrest the attention of the modern engineer, and more often are insignificant. It is only when the records of the production of some of the older camps are studied, which show them to have continuously produced over very extended periods, that a realization is borne home that occasionally this type is worthy of consideration even in these days of gigantic tonnage.
Citation
APA:
(1925) Sampling and Estimating Ore Deposits - Methods of Sampling and Estimating Lead-silver Ore - Sampling and Estimating Cordilleran Lead-silver Limestone Replacement DepositsMLA: Sampling and Estimating Ore Deposits - Methods of Sampling and Estimating Lead-silver Ore - Sampling and Estimating Cordilleran Lead-silver Limestone Replacement Deposits. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1925.