NO. 2 BIBLIOGRAPHY OF TIN HESS 61 



EAST INDIES (Continued) 



302. . Borneo. Entdeckungsreisen und Untersuchungen. Gegenwar- 



tiger Stand der geologischen Kenntnisse. Verbreitung der -nutzbaren 

 Mineralien. 



1889, Berlin, pp. 344-345. 



Describes the tin deposits of the island of Borneo. 



303. REYER, EDUARD. Zinn in Birma, Siam und Malakka. 



Oest. Zeitschr. Berg. Hiitt., Vol. 27, 1879, Wien, pp. 563-564, 575-576, sketch map 1. 



304. . Die Zinnerzlagerstatten von Perak, Malacca, und ihre Aus- 



beutung. 



Berg. Hiitt. Zeit., Vol. 47, 1888, Leipzig, pp. 181-183. 



. See No. 1354. 



305. ROLKER, CHARLES M. The alluvial tin deposits of Siak, Sumatra. 



Trans. Amer. Inst. Mg. Eng., Vol. 20, 1891, New York, pp. 50-84. 



Digest: Report on Mineral Industries in the United States at the Eleventh Census, 

 1890, Washington, D. C., 1892, pp. 257-264. 



Reviews briefly the history of tin mining in the East Indies, prefatory to a de- 

 scription of the physical characteristics, rivers, climate, geology, distribution of 

 tin, accompanying minerals, costs of mining, labor supply, tools and customs ot 

 the district of Siak, Sumatra. Gives present exports of tin from East Indies. 



306. SCHNEIDER, C. F. A. Geologische Uebersicht tiber den hollandisch- 



ostindischen Archipel. 



Jahrb. k. k. geol. Reichs., Vol. 26, 1876, Wien, pp. 122, 134. 



307. TENISON-WOODS, J. E. The geology of Malaysia, Southern China, etc. 



Nature, Vol. 33, 1886, London, p. 232. 



States that he saw tin ore brought from the Kinebetungen River, Borneo, by D. 

 D. Daly, private secretary of the governor. 



308. WILDMAN, (Consul). Tin in Java, 



Eng. Mg. Journ., Vol. 55, 1893, New York, p. 231. 



States that a Dutch company has erected works and a smelter at Singkep to test 

 the tin ores discovered at that place. Reports discovery of tin at Jahor. 

 Original article not available to the authors. 







See under Banka, Billiton, New Guinea. 



ENGLAND 



309. ABBOTT, GEORGE, JR. An essay on the mines of England; their importance 



as a source of national wealth and as a channel for the advantageous 

 employment of private capital. 



1833, London, pp. 227. 



310. ANONYMOUS. Tin mines. The whole history of the tin works in Corn- 



wall, beginning with their manner of working in the times of the 

 Saxons. 



Harleian manuscript, No. 6380. Not available to the authors. Reference made from 

 Boase, G. C., and Courtney, W. P., Bibliotheca Cornubiensis, Vol. 3, 1882, London, 

 p. 1020. 



