Technical Note - Geochemical Study Of Pb-Ag-Zn Ore From The Darwin Mine, Inyo County, California

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Wayne E. Hall
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
1
File Size:
91 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 9, 1959

Abstract

The Darwin mining district of California, 160 miles north of Los Angeles, has yielded an estimated $45 million in lead, silver, zinc, and copper since 1875. The deposits are in silicated limestone of Pennsylvanian and Permian age close to a stock of horn- blende-biotite-quartz monzonite. Steep left-lateral strike-slip faults that strike N 50" 70" E served as feeder channels for the ore solutions, and minor folds, favorable beds, and faults close to the feeder channels localized the orebodies. The orebodies are irregular, steep, pipe-like replacements that cut across bedding, bedding replacements, and fissure fillings in a calc-silicate country rock consisting mainly of wollastonite, grossularite-andradite garnet, idocrase, and diopside. Near surface the ore consists of a soft, crumbly mass of cerussite, hemimorphite, jarosite, limonite, and some secondary copper minerals. The primary ore consists of galena, sphalerite, pyrite, pyrrhotite, and chalcopyrite with smaller amounts of andorite, matildite, scheelite, tetrahedrite, and a high silver- lead-bismuth-selenium-bearing galena.
Citation

APA: Wayne E. Hall  (1959)  Technical Note - Geochemical Study Of Pb-Ag-Zn Ore From The Darwin Mine, Inyo County, California

MLA: Wayne E. Hall Technical Note - Geochemical Study Of Pb-Ag-Zn Ore From The Darwin Mine, Inyo County, California. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1959.

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