NO. 2 BIBLIOGRAPHY OF TIN HESS 197 



GENERAL BIBLIOGRAPHY (Continued) 



1323. FUCHS, E., and DE LAUNAY, L. Trait6 des gltes mine'raux et m6talli- 



f&res. 



Vol. 2, 1893, Paris, pp. 101-158. 



Treats of the uses and statistics of tin, tin veins and general geology; tin of Corn- 

 wall, Germany, France, Spain and Portugal, Italy, Bolivia, Malay Peninsula, Banka 

 and Billiton and Australia. 



1323a. GOOD, T. The world's tin supply. 



Ca^sier's Magazine, Vol. 34, 1908, New York, pp. 483-487. 



By arguing from wrong and insufficient data, concludes that there is no danger of 

 the world's tin supply giving out in the near future. 



1324. GRAHAM, WALTER. Tin, tin plate and tin alloys. 



Brit. Mfr. Indust, Vol. 1, 1876, pp. 155-172. 



Treats subject under following heads: 



Early history of Cornwall tin; discovery of tin in Misina and Bohemia; properties 

 of tin; description of tin ore and its occurrence; reduction of ore; refining; uses of 

 tin in manufactures; tin-plate working; tin alloys; uses in the arts. 



1325. GRAY, JOHN W. Some notes concerning tin. 



Mg. Sci. Press, Vol. 88, 1904, San Francisco, pp. 197-198, 2000 words. 

 Concerning the location of the tin deposits of the world, method of extraction, the 

 distribution and production of the metal. 



1326. GUENTHER, RICHARD. Tin production of the world. 



Monthly Consular Reports, State Department, March, 1905, Washington, D. C., p. 32. 



Quotes " German returns " giving production of 1903 as 93,093 tons. (Kind of tons 

 not stated.) Refers to " considerable deposits " in South Dakota, Wyoming, South 

 Carolina and North Carolina. 



1327. KENWOOD, WM. J. Observations on metallife'rous deposits. 



Trans. Roy. Geol. Soc. Cornwall, Vol. 8, 1871, Penzance. 



Treats of tin as an occasional constituent of rocks; of the derivation of stream tin, 

 and why it is superior to lode tin in purity; extraction of tin ore by different 

 classes of labor; the association of stream tin with gold in Wicklow and Banca, and 

 with gold and platinum in Australia; of Roman remains in partially worked stream 

 beds; and of the association of tin with fluorine. 



1328. HESS, FRANK L. Review of " Tin deposits of the world," by Sydney 



Fawns. 



Econ. Geol., Vol. 1, 1906, Lancaster, pp. 500-502. 



1329. HESS, FRANK L*., and GRATON, L. C. The occurrence and distribution 



of tin. 



Contributions to Economic Geology, 1904, U. S. Geol. Surv. Bull. 260, Washington, 

 D. C., pp. 161-188. 



Digest in Mg. Mag., Vol. 11, 1905, New York, p. 559. 



A short compilation of data upon most of the known occurrences of tin, with a 

 bibliography of ninety-two works. 



1330. HOPKINS, EVAN. On the superficial production of gold, oxide of tin, etc., 



or alluvial metalliferous deposits. 



H. English's Min. Almanac, 1849, pp. 192-197. 

 Not available to the authors. 



