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Volume 12 (1866) (428 pages)

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Page: of 428

Ghe Blining and Scientific Press,
Gommmurications,
In rH1s DEPARTMENT we luvito the FREE Discussion of all
ate au bict leaping ents alone belng responslble for
he ideas and theories they advance.
[Wrltten for the Mining and Scientific Press]
THE AGE OF GOLD-BEARING ROOKS,
BY PROFESSOR ROWLANDSON, F. G. 8. Le
ad
\S
Wo. Ix.
(conTINvED FRom PaGz 402, VoL. x1.)
SIR RODERICK MURCHISON’S VIEWS — HONOR
AWARDED WHERE HONOR IS DUE.
Before quoting the views expressed hy this
world-renowned and justly celebrated geologist, I take the opportunity of publicly expressing my grateful thanks for’ the deep obligation which I personally feel towards Sir Roderick Murchison, for the great nmount of labor
undergone, and ahility displayed hy him in
drawing up his “ Silurian System ;” for, although I had entered upon the inquiry of the
age of gold-hearing rocks somewhat simultaneously with the commencement of Sir Roderick’s lahorers in Siluria, my researches on
this question were commenced from a starting
point different from that taken hy the distinguished geologist alluded to—mine was taken
chiefly from a chemico-metallurgic hasis—Sir
Roderick’s from palceontological and stratagraphic evidence. It is only due to Sir Roderick to state, that op to the period when he
published the views contained in the following
quotations, all the evidence previously gathered
tended not only to show the soundness of his
generalization, as hased on the facts which had
been up to that time positively ascertained in
regard to the palceontology of gold regions,
but also from their persistency, as far as was
then known, necessarily led to a belief, amounting to conviction, that the views originally
propounded hy Sir Roderick would hold good
the world over. In regard to the latter point,
I think Sir Roderick will find it necessary,
from the evidence supplied hy California, to
modify his theory to some extent, as to the
Age of Gold Bearing Rocks, especially those
lying adjacent to this part of the Pacific coast,
and possihly some other parts of the world to
which attention will he drawn hereafter.
To respectfully drawing the attention of geologists, generally, and that of Sir Roderick
Murchison, in particular, to the fact that gold
bearing quartz lodes are, on tolerahly good
evidence, fonnd to exist over a large extent of
country, in this and adjoining States, amidst
rocks of secondary, and possibly of tertiary
age, I feel certain that however much such a
view may he in opposition to a very frequently
and strongly expressed theory of Sir Roderick,
Do one more readily than himself will cheerfully admit the soundness of any new view,
when reasonahly supported, however much
that may differ from his own, as previously
expressed ; and further, that he will ost willingly lend all the aid which his position and
just influence enables him to so extensively
exercise in order to ascertain the true theory
of this interesting subject, to the end that it
may, if possihle, he turned to economic aceount.
The condition of geology at the time when
Sir Roderick Murchison published his “ Silurian System,” eince which nearly a gcneration
has heen called into existence and passed
away, was eomething tike that of chemistry, as
applied to agriculture, etc., when Liehig, only
avery few years later, reduced chaotic and
dispersed masses of‘ valuahle matter and experiments into system. The world is indehted
to Sir Redcrick Murchison for like valuable
agsistance in regard to geology, and it would
he difficult to imagine or describe the debt of
gratitude that is duc to that gentleman from
the present as well as hy future generations.
Individually, Tngain tender to Sir Roderick
my acknowledgiments of the personal advantagee which I have derived in studying geology
trom an early perusal of his Silurian System.
As hrevity is said to he the soul of wit, I hope
that iu thue curtly according my thanks to
him a like hrevity will he accepted as the essence of sincerity.
SIR RODERICK MURCHISON’S VIEWS ON GOLDBEARING ROCKS.
Sir Roderick states, at page 474 of his third
edition of Siluria ;
« Tet us first reflect upon the genernl fact,
that, whilst all the stratified formations are
composed either of crystalline and paleozoic
rocks, or of secondary and tertiary deposits,
gold has never heen found in any appreciable
quantity in either of the two last-menutioned
classes of strata. The vast areas, therefore,
which are covered hy all such younger formations are excluded from the application of onr
reasoning ; and every one who lives in tracte
the subsoil of which consists of such rocks,
may at once be assured, that he can never profitahly extract gold from them.
Having laid down this generalization, which
affirms that hy far the largest portion of land
ou the face of the globe never contains gold,
we proceed to consider the nature and limits
of the gold-hearing rocks, nnd then indicate
how the chief wealth is derived from superficial auriferous drifted materials or gravel.
Appealing to the structure of the different
countries which at former periods have afforded
or still afford any notahle nmount of gold, we
find in all a general agreemeut. Whether, referring to the ancient history, we cast our eyes
to the countries watered hy the Pactolus of
Ovid, to the Phrygia and Thrace of the Greeks,
to the Alps* nnd golden I’ gns of the Romans.
to the Bohemia of the Middle Ages, to tracts
io Britain which were worked in old times, and
hove either heer: long abandoned or are now
scarcely at all productive, or to to those chains
in America and Australia which, previously
uusearched, have, in our times, proved so rich
—we invariably find the same constants in
nature. In all these lands, gold has been imparted abnndantly to one class only of those
ancient rocks whose order and succession we
have traced, or to the associated eruptive
rocks. The most nsual, original position of
the metal is in quartzose veinstones that
traverse altered Silurian slates (chiefly Lower
Silurian), frequently near their junction with
eruptive rocks. Sometimes, however, it is partially diffused through the body of rocks of
igneous origin.”
“Seeing. on the one hand, that the oldest
rock, and, on the other, the medinl and youngest deposits never contain gold, and that yet
(as will he shown) the metal ie of recent accumulation ex masse, it might seem to follow
that there existed in those original deposits
which have since become largely auriferous,
the elements out of which gold was subsequently hrought together in rich veinstones.
It is indeed a tact, ns will hereafter he shown,
that there are fine-grained old schistose sediments in which gold is so impalpahly disseminated, that it ie difficult to imagine how this
diffusion could have occurred if the original
menstruum had not contained the elements of
the ore. In that diffused state the gold may
have remained long after the consolidation of
the sediment, until, in ages long posterior, it
was run together into metallic veinstones by
metamorphic action, or segregated into the
lumps and filaments in which it now occurs.
But, however we may account for them, the
facts are those which I have for many years
exposed—viz., that a certain geological zone
only in the crust of the globe has heen rendered richly auriferoust}.
*In truth, as above expressed, every old country of
Europe, where tho rocks were onco aurifcrous, bas long
ecased to yleld any yaluable amount of gold. In referenco
to the Alps, 1am indebted to my learued friend Mr, J. W.
Cowell for pointing out to me the following passage iu
Strabo (Book iv. ch. 6, sect. 12), by which it appears that
even Imperial Rome was at ovo timo inundated with a
glut of goid from her Northorn mountains —* Polybius
says that in bis lime the gold mines were so rich about
{oorth of ?] Aquileia, but especially in the country of
the Taurise: Norici, that if you dug but two feet below the
surface you found gold. and that the diggings (generally)
were not deeper than 15 feet ; that in some instances the
gold was found pure, in lumps of the size ofa bean or a
lupin, and which lost ouly one-eighth in smelting, in others
it required more smelting. but was very profituble. Jtaljansaiding the barbarians intho working for two months,
gold becamo forthwith oue-third cheaper over the whole
of Italy ; and tho Turisci discovering this, drove the associate Italians away and monopolized it themsolves. At
present all gold mines belong to the Romans.”
+ When preparing this work for press, Ireccived a letter
from Mr, Lieber, the State Geologist of South Carolina,
which, being explained by 2 second letter from that gcntleman, in reply to ono which Taddressel to him, conlains a
little tahle which cloarly expressos bis views as derivod
from hig experience in South Carolina and the Bruzils,
Tracing out the peculiar features of the “ itacolumite ”
and its associated rocks of * itaberite” and “ specular irou
scbist,’? and a compound of tale und magnetic irou, which
he terms “ entawhberite,” Mr. Lieber afirms, that*these
rocks, together with clay and taleoso slates, are chiefly
auriferous, and that none of the recks above them ever
bear gold, whilst the miea slates bencath aro mue!: less
productivo of the ore, Ho consequently clussifies the
whole in ascendiug order, xs Sub-auriferous, Aurilerous,
and Post-auriferous—a mineral classification which is in
accorfance with the data 1 have long endeavored to establish by geological and paleontological proofs,
To se ResuneD.—The line of steamers hetween New Orleans and San Francisco, susnended hy the Rehellion,is to he again in
operation. On the Ist of Jannary, the Pacific
Mail Stenmship Company isto place a steamcr
on the line from New Orleans, via Havana, to
Aspinwall, connecting at the latter place with
the steamers to and from San Francisco.
Some of the principal New York hotels talk
of raising the price of hoard to $6 per day.
There are families in the Fifth avenue who
give $500 or $600 a week for their mere lodging and hoarding privilege, while their extras”
will reach $300 or $400 more.
a [Wrltten for the Mining and Scientlfic Press.}
Gold Bearing Sulphurets and their Reduction.”
REPLY £0 “A STUDENT OF METALLUOICAL
CHEMISTRY.”
Messrs. Eprrors :—I notice in your issue of
the 23d ultimo,a communication signed “ A
Student of Metallurgical Chemistry,” in which
the motives of my contrihution to yonr‘journal,
of Decemher 9th, are unjustifiahly attacked,
and the positions assumed by me attempted to
he controverted. :
I would premise my reply to the author hy
hinting thatthe perusal of the gentleman's
communication, without the signature, conveys
evidence that it is written by a student, and
certainly one not very far advanced in his
studies.
My ohject is not concealed, nor is any at-.
tempt made at the same. It was written for .
the benefit of the mining community of Caliples ofichemistry, claiming to be competent to
sextract the precious metals from their ores.
abandoned, miners ruined, public confidence
shaken in all mining operations, and the production of the precious metals limited to about
one-third of what it ought to he.
The method invented by myself for the reduction of the precious metals from the goldbearing salphurets was not “nbandoncd as
impracticable.” On the contrary, it is available for treating sulphurets rich in gold, especjally some of those at Grass Valley, hut not for
those holding so small an amount as $20 per
ton where labor is high. ‘
I did not condemn the common reverberatory furnace—these are my words : “ By means
of this method the precioue metals are “ freed”
wheu contained in hi-sulphide of iron ;” neither was! ignorant that condensing chamhers
form an essential part of said furnace ; alluding
to the mechanical loss of gold, I said, “ it is loss
unless some means be employed for its collection.” In copying the manuscript, I inadvertedly omitted the following to complete the
paragraph: “This method is too slow and
expensive for California.”
(did not disapprove of reverheratory fornaces for the purpose of chlorination. Reterring
to the “ Chlorination “Process,” I spoke of
oxidation heing performed iu theni previous
to the treatment of the mase hy chlorine, ete.,
@ process it would appear the “ Student” is
unacquainted with. IL did not discredit the
methods of the distinguished Metallurgists,
Agustin, Ziervogel and Von Patera; these
employ said furnaces for a purpose foreign to
the suhject in question. My remarks were
confincd solely to the treatment of gold hearing sulphurets, a euhject I profess to undcrstand.
I have nothing to retract concerning “ inventions in the shape of furnaces ;” two of
the said inveutors have admitted to me that
their iuventions did not answer their expectatiuns. Iam uot at liberty to pablish their
reasons. ,
Regarding the peformance of “ The Gold
and bilver Separating Company’s Furnace”
(Dr. Hagan’s) the “ Student” seems to intimate
that thecrade sulphurots taken for assay did
not represent the “ mass mixed” from which
the third assay wns made; I will endeavor to
eulighten him on this point, thanking him ip
the first place for correcting a typographical
error. It seeins the gentlemanis an arithmetician, as well as a student of metallurgy. Assuy fist is the mean of five assays made on as
fair a sample of the ernde mineral as could he
ohtuined ; they not disagreeing wore than some
$30 ahove, nor $11 per ton less than the meau
(not an oucomimon occurreuce). Assay third
is likewise the mean of five assays made on
the mass after treatincnt, obtuined ina like
manner to that hy which the sainple from
which assay firs? was made; these disagreed
from $45 above to $26 per tou helow the
mean, thas showing that a fair sample was
ohtaincd. Siath assay of the tailings ; this
was an assay of the “refuse” nfter amalgamation ; had I made no series of them (1 considered it unnecessaiy to do so), “the agerecate
of the extraction and that left inthe tailings”
night have equalled the amount as per nssay
third; as itis, I consider assay sixth sufficiently
exuct forall pructical purposes; from these
results, along with those of the otncr threc
experiments. I considered myself justified in
arriving at this fair conclusion, omitting fractions of a per cent., viz: 55 per cent., de-.
sulphurized ; 16 per cent., lost ; 52 per cent. .
extracted and 32 percent. left in the tailinge.
The treated mass was ainalgamated, and the
amaleam carefully separated hy a“ Workman”
without any apparent loss. Again, the * Student” is unwilling to admit that there was any
loss of gold during treatment. I maintain that
‘there was, knowing that fair eamplee were
ohtained for aseay hoth before and after treat.
ment. He says: “ But aside from this, add the
. fixed, positive data obtained hy the extraction
-of $205.12 to that ehown by assay remainuin
in the tailings, and we have $205.12+146.12
=$351.24. Now, suhtracting this Inst sum
from the assay of the crude sulphurets=$395.
48—351.24—=44,24 per ton, or not quire twelve
per cent. loss.” This quasi admitted loss from
a 55 per cent. desulphurization, or rather say
what is warranted by the “ Student’s” arithmetic, 11.19 per cent., added to 9.15 per cent.,
corresponding to the complemeut (45) of 100
per cent., would make 20.34 per cent. loss, provided the whole of the mineral had heen desalphurized; so it would appear that the minimum mechanical loss of gold mentioned in my
communication (20 per cent.) wonld have heen
experienced had the farnace heen capable of
i . doing what it is represented to do,
fornin, who have heen so often imposed npon j/
hy persons entirely ignoraut of the first princi}
sulphide of iron.
1 cannot see the analogy hetween decarhonizing carhonate of lime aud desulphurizing biThe first isa proto-sall, the
second alernary compound. Heat decomposes
the former, whereas it does not separate the
What has heen the result? Vnolunhle mines 1 E
whole of the sulphur from the latter. I do not
advance this by way of proof to show that hisulphide of iron cannot he deselphurized in
lumps, hut merely to show the fallacy of the
« Student’s ” reasoning.
But the “Student” is continually harping
on the “ effectual method,” and naively says:
“This method is mainly commended to our
confidence, from the circumistance of his being
requested to examine the performance of this
furnace {using his own words) in my professional capacity.” Verily, this is arriving at a
conclusion with a vengeance.
Experiments were niade hy me years ago on
sulphorets in lnmps, both with steam and
without it, for the purpose of desulphurizing
them. I nlways obtained a negative result.
On the contrary, I have experimented on *‘ tolerably fine crushed ” sulpharets in an arrangement similar to Mr. White’s, on the same
principle, and obtained desulpharization of tho
mineral, with the exception of some milliemes
of sulphur that was found associated with iron
and oxygen ; this small portion was not inimical tothe extraction of the precious metals
from the oxidized mineral by amalgamation.
I am aware that Mr. White's furnace was
exhihited to the public at Newark, New Jersey, about eighteen wonthe ago. Several
chemists and persons engaged in the husiness
of testing ores witnessed its performauco.
Some of them gave certificates regarding its
merits. One “student ’ was nmoug the number.
Any competent investigator will find no difficulty in pertorming experiments to satisfy
himself that what I have stated regarding the
two tarnaces (Dr. Hagan’s aud Mr. White's) is
true. Certainly no candid person will deny
that the objections urged hy the “student ’’
against the comnion reverheratory furnaces are
overcome in Mr. White’s, viz :—*‘ the expense
of huilding and keeping them in repair, the
trouble and cost of working the ore properly,
and the constant drend of careless and indifferent workmen, upon whom the successful working of the ore chiefly depends.”
The cost of Mr. W.’s is less in proportion
thau the common furnnces, considering the
amount of work it is capahle of perlorming.
The attendance of one workman is only required to keep up the requisite degree of heat,
and feed the hopper with the ground mineral,
which discharges itsclf at the other end, the
wear and tear being trifling, while the coil of
pipe in the chimney, from which jets of cold
water are ejected, acts the part of a condensing
chamher, thus securing a compact apparatus
as wellasacheap method. .
There is an old adage—* The greatest thief
always calls thief first.” So the “ Student’s ”
communication, accusing me of interested motives, will readily convey conviction to the mind
of the most uhtuse reader, that his object is to
holster up a process that had sunk into ohscurity, aud is now attempted to he revived
under a new patent.
The “ Student” appears not to confine his
glowing intellect to the study of metallurgy
only; bat assumes to occupy the chair of a
modern Chesterfield, and read me lessons upon
taste and propriety; yet as I have already
lived the greater part of a long life, I would
suggest to him that his labors in this hehalf
are not appreciated. I would also suggeet to
him that in the scientific world, at least, the
names of individuals heing given is, to some
extent, a guarantee of good faith; and if the
“Stadent” has heen more than three months
in this city, and is of sufficient age to have. experience in the matters in controversy to give
weight to his opinions, it might be well tor him
to shake off his cloak of modesty and let your
readers know to whom they are indehted for