NO. 



BIBLIOGRAPHY OF TIN — HESS 201 



GENERAL BIBLIOGRAPHY (Continued) 



1358. Sandbebger, F. Ueber das Vorkommen des Zinn in Silicaten. 



Sitz. Kon. bayer. Akad. Wiss., Vol. 8, 1S78, Munchen, pp. 136-139. 

 Digest: Neues Jahrb. Min., 1878, Stuttgart, pp. 748-749. 



1359. ScHULTz, F. W. Solder, its production and application with a brief 



history of tin and lead. 



Unpaged. About 23 pages including Chapters III to VI are devoted to tin. A brief 

 history of the use of tin, a summary of its production, and a somewhat inaccurate 

 description of the localities producing it, are given. 



1360. Sedgwick, Adam. Remarks on the structure of large mineral masses, 



and especially on the chemical changes produced in the aggregation of 

 stratified rocks during different periods after their deposition. 



Trans. Geol. Soc. London, Vol. 3, 1S2'J, London, p. 483. 



States that besides occurring along joints tin deposits occur as segregations from 

 granite. 

 Short paragraph. 



1361. Sexton, A. Humbolt. Notes on tin. 



Mech. Eng., Vol. 21, 1908, London, pp. 43-46, 99-101, 175-177, 239-240, ilhis. 



Serial. First part. " The present number considers its physical and chemical 

 properties, uses, value; tin minerals and ores, their distribution," etc. 



Second part. Mining and ore dressing. " The methods of working alluvial tin de- 

 posits are described and then the methods of concentrating tin ore are outlined. Notes 

 regarding crushing, magnetic separation, and wet concentration given." 



Third part. Smelting. " Discusses different methods of smelting tin. Reverbera- 

 tory method as used in Cornwall and Singapore described; also shaft furnace smelt- 

 ing and Chinese methods." 



Fourth part. Refining. " Discusses the refining of the metal and the process used 

 in Cornwall." 



1362. Smyth, Warington, Address of the president. 



Trans. Roy. Geol. Soc. Cornwall, Vol. 10, 1SS7, Penzance, pp. XVII-XX. 

 Treats of tin occurrence, mining and production of Queensland, New South Wales, 

 Banca, Billiton and the East Indies in a very brief way. 



1363. Stevens, Chas. Tin; history and production. 



Austr. Mg. Stand., Vol. 28, 1902, Sydney and Melbourne, pp. 543-544, 580, 2700 words. 

 " Reviews the history of this mineral, giving the sources of supply, the formation 

 of the lodes, etc." 



1364. Struthers, Joseph, and Pratt, Joseph Hyde. The production of tin in 



1903. 



Min. Res. U. S. for 19(<3, U. S. Geol. Surv., 1904, Wa.shington, D. C, pp. 335-349. 



Treats briefly of the Black Hills deposits; the Alaskan deposits (taken from A. J. 

 Collier's Bull. 229, U. S. Geol. Surv.); the Carolina tin belt; the market conditions, 

 especially in the United States; and the world's pio4uction. 



1365. Tassin, Wirt. Descriptive catalogue of the collections of gems in 



the U. S. National Museum. 



Ann. Rep. Board Reg. Smithsonian Institution, 1902, Washington, D. C, p. 494. 

 Cassiterite is described. 



