134 SMITHSONIAN .MISCELLANEOUS COLLECTIONS VOL. 58 



NORTHERN TERRITORY (Continued) 

 861a. PLAYFORD, E. C. Tin in Australia. 



Mg. Journ. Railw. Comm. Gaz., Vol. 85, 1909, Lorifion, p. 577. 



Notice of same. Eng. Min. Journ., Vol. 87, 1909, New York, p. 1272. 



Gives an account of, and outlook for a new discovery of alluvial tin at a place 

 bearing the native name of Warra, close to Pine Creek, Northern Territory. 



Tin ore is black, with a little brown, ruby, amber and wood tin. Country rock 

 consists of a gray granite and sandstone, with a little, quartz. Small amount of 

 monazite has been found with tin. 



862. TATE, RALPH. Report on the Northern Territory. 



Geol. Surv. South Australia, No. 63, 1882, Adelaide, p. 4, map. 



Two alluvial deposits have been located, along one of the tributaries of McKinlay 

 River, and the head waters of a stream near Mt. Wells. The deposits are of compara- 

 tively little importance. Neither of these deposits of tinstone seemed to be 

 associated with granite. 



863. TENISON-WOOD, J. E. Report on the geology and mineralogy of North- 



ern Territory. 



Geol. Surv. South Australia, No. 122, 1886, Adelaide, p. 7. 



Ore occurs in the form of reef tin. Is abundant and rich. Spread over wide area. 

 Metalliferous country resembles that of Cornwall. " The Northern Territory may be 

 emphatically pronounced to be a tin country." 



NORWAY 



BROGGEB, W. C. See No. 1596. 



PERAK 



See Malay Peninsula 



PERSIA 



864. HENNECKE, LUDWIG. Die Bodenschatze Persiens. 



Zeitschr. Berg. Hiitt. Sal. preuss, Sta., Vol. 47, 1899, Berlin, pp. 272-274. 



Digest trans: Trans. Inst. Mg. Eng., Vol. 18, 1899-1900, London and Newcastle-upon- 

 Tyne, p. 509. 



" Rich occurrences have been certified in many parts of Persia, of mercury, copper, 

 tin, and antimony-ores, realgar, native sulphur, brown iron ore, manganese and 

 cobalt-ores, kaolin, borax and alum." 



865. MACTEAB, JAS. Some notes on Persian mining and metallurgy. 



Trans. Inst. Mg. Met., Vol. 3, 1894-95, London, pp. 2-3. . 



Quotes from a letter of Dr. Riach to Lord Palmerston in 1837 concerning a 

 supposedly very large deposit of tin ore on Anngert Creek near the village of Juwaa, 

 60 miles northeast of Tabriz, but when visited in 1893 or 1894 by Mactear, nothing 

 was known of the tin. 



PERU 



866. ANONYMOUS. Nuevos yacimientos de estano y bismuto en el Peru. 



Bol. Soc. Nac. Min., No. 87, 1905, Lima, pp. 103-105. 



Extract: Mo. Bull. Int. Bur. Amer. Repub., Vol. 21, July, 1905, Washington, D. C., 

 p. 131. 



Until recently tin ores were considered rare in Peru, the only deposits known to 

 exist being those described by Prof. Raimondi in the district of Moho, Province of 

 Huancane", Dept. of Puno. Mineral veins and veinlets containing tin were afterwards 

 described by Carlos Posth as existing in quartz in the Pataoca and Accaobina spurs 

 of the Andes in the Vilque district. Tin is now known to be widely distributed in 

 Peru. Some specimens from Province of CajatambO;, were rich in metallic tin. 



