NO. 2 BIBLIOGRAPHY OF TIN — HESS 181 



UNITED STATES (Continued) 



1203. Day, David T. Tin. 



Min. Res. U. S. for 1S91, U. S. Geol. Surv., 1S93, Washington, D. C, pp. 1G4-1C6. 

 Treats of the development of the tin mines of United States during 1891. 



1203a. — . Tin. Mineral Industries of the United States. 



Eleventh Census. Census Office, 1S!>2, Wi^shiiigton, D. C, pp. 249-265. 



Treats of the occurrence of tin in Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Maine, Virginia, 

 North Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Texas, California and South Dakota. The condi- 

 tions of occurrence in the Black Hills is treated at some length, development work 

 done, and a list of claims given. Also treats of the foreign production of tin. 



1204. Douglas, Jas. Summary of American improvements and inventions 



in ore crushing and concentration, and in the metallurgy of copper, 

 lead, gold, silver, nickle, aluminum, zinc, mercury, antimony and tin. 



Trans. Amer. Inst. Mg. Eng., Vol. 22, 1894, New York, p. 34.3. 



" Tin is widely diffused from Maine to Alabama in Appalachian Range, exploited 

 from Dakota to California, but the mining of it so far has nowhere been sufficiently 

 remunerative to create a smelting industry." 



1205. Emmens, Stephen H. American tin mines. 



Eng. News Amer. Railw. Journ., Vol. 28, 1892, New Vork, pp. 4S4-48C. 



Abstract of reports of J. Tliomas and Lord Thurlow on Harney tin mines. Also 

 brief review and prospects of the tin deposits in North Carolina, California and 

 Virginia. 



120G. Emmons, S. F. Geological distribution of useful metals in United 

 States. 



Trans. Amer. Inst. Mg. Eng., Vol. 22, 1893, New York, pp. 71-72. 



Describes the geological occurrence in different parts of the United States of iron, 

 manganese, nickel, tin, copper, lead, zinc, quicksilver, gold and silver, and gives a 

 summary of conclusions concerning the genesis of their minerals. 



Faw^ns, Sydney. See No. 1320. 



Fucns, E., and Launay, L. de. See No. 1323. 



1207. Garrison, F. Lynwood. Tin in the United States. 



Eng. Mg. Journ., Vol. 78, 1904, New York, pp. 830-832. 



Reprint: Min. Ind. for 19C4, Vol. 13, 1905, New York and London, pp. 400-405. 



Brief review of history of discoveries of tin in this country. Summary of occur- 

 rence in Black Hills, at Temescal, York River, Virginia, North and South Carolina. 

 Compares United States deposits with those in different parts of the world. 



Gives average yield from some principal producers elsewhere. Short sketches of 

 occurrence in Bolivia and Malay Archipelago. 



1208. Headden, W. p. Mineralogical notes, No. III. 



Proc. Colorado Sci. Soc, Vol. 8, 1900, Denver, pp. 167-173. 



Pp. 167-168 give an analysis of cassiterite (credited to " Mecklenberg, N. C," but 

 probably from further west or south in the tin belt), which contains SnO„ 95.18, 

 FeO, 1.11 and Ta.,0,, 3.82. Sp. gr. 6.7G71. Pp. 169-170: Cassiterite which he tliinks 

 resulted from the decomposition of stannite, from the Etta mine, South Dakota, gave 

 SnO, 94.36, Ta„0. 2.42, Fe,,0„ 1.80, SiO.^ 1.00. 



Analyses of cassiterite from Herbert's Placer and the Sammelias claim No. 3, 

 Pennington County, South Dakota, showed only iron and SiO^ as impurities. 



1209. Hess, Frank L. Tin. 



Min. Res. U. S. for 1905, U. S. Geol. Surv., 1900, Washington, D. C, pp. 445-451. 



