198 SMITHSONIAN MISCELLANEOUS COLLECTIONS VOL. 58 



GENERAL BIBLIOGRAPHY (Continued) 



1331. Hunt, T. S. Remarks on the occurrence of tin ore at Winslow, Me. 



Trans. Anicr. Inst. Mg. Eng., Vol. 1, 1S71-1873, New York, pp. 373-374. 

 Remarks by Prof. Silliman and R. W. Raj'mond, pp. 374-375. 

 Besides Winslow, Paris and Hebron are mentioned as having tin deposits. 

 In the discussion, a very brief and general review of tin deposits is given to afford 

 comparison with the deposits under discussion. 



1332. INGALLS, W. R. Tin. 



Min. Ind. for 1905, Vol. 14, 19(16, New York and London, pp. 534-556. 

 Treats of the tin deposits of the world. 



1333. Jars, Gabriel. Voyages metallurgiques. 



3 Vols., 1774-1781, Lyon. 

 Not available to the authors. 



1334. Kalb, Courtnay de. Relation of tin to trap dikes. 



Eng. Mg. Journ., Vol. 45, 1S8S, New York, p. 435. 



States that he has never heard of tin in greisen or granitic rocks, but always in 

 quartz veins close to basaltic dikes. States that small amounts of cassiterite have 

 been found in Haywood and Henderson counties. North Carolina. 



1334a. Lakes, Arthur. Tin. History, use. 



Mg. World. Vol. 30, 1909, Cliicago, pp. 1170-1171. 1 fig. 



" The Ideology and mineralogy, history, uses and sources of fin are treated. The 

 object of this article is to familiarize the reader with tin mining." 



1335. Lapparent, A. de. Traite de geologic. 



18S3, Paris, pp. 1172-1177, fig. 1. 



Treats in a general way tin deposits in Saxony, Bohemia, Cornwall, France, East 

 Indies, Australia, China, Mexico and Italy. 



1336. Leibius, Adolph. Remarks on tin ore and what may appear like it. 



Trans. Roy. Soc. New South Wales, Vol. 6, 1S72 (1873), Sydney, pp. 73-74. 

 Description of minerals that may be mistaken for tin ore, and ways of differentiat- 

 ing them. 



1337. Lindgren, Waldemar. Metasomatic processes in fissure-veins. 



Trans. Amer. Inst. Mg. Eng., Vol. 30, 1900 (1901), Now York, pp. 619-626. 

 Topaz-cassiterite veins. Altenberg and Zinnwald, Saxony, Mt. Bischoff, Tasmania. 

 Same paper also published with Posepny's " Genesis of Ore Deposits," pp. 540-545 

 (2d Ed.). Uses these tin deposits as examples of metasomatism. 



1338. Lock, C. G. Warnford. Economic mining. 



1895, New York, pp. 622-6.35, fig. 1. 



Tin mining districts treated, rocks in which tin occurs described, yield, method of 

 working, profit. Cornish tin districts, Spain, India, Dutch East Indies, Tasmania, 

 Australia, Queensland, New South Wales, Mexico, Bolivia, South Africa. Treatment 

 of ores. Commerce. 



1339. Loos, D. DE. Tin. 



1888, Haarlem. 



Not available to the authors. 



1340. Louis, Henry. The production of tin. 



Mg. .lourn. Railw. Comni. Gaz., Vol. 69, 1899, London. A series of articles. 



Pp. 516, 547. On tin in general; history, mode of occurrences, manner of working. 



Pp. 581, 611. Cornwall. 



P. 643. Central Europe, Iberian Peninsula, Finland, remainder of Europe, Africa. 



