268 PROCEEDINGS OF THE GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY. [April 28, 



returns would be yielded by a metallurgical treatment better adapted 

 to the character of the ore. 



In the same township as the Richardson Mine, gold- ores have 

 recently been worked at several localities. The Madoc Gold- 

 Mining Company's shaft on lot seventeen in the seventh concession 

 of Madoc was sunk on a quartz lode, coursing through gneiss IST. 15° 

 W., and dipping about 60° W. Very Httle free gold was visible ; but 

 the iron-pyrites disseminated through the quartz was apparently 

 auriferous. Samples of vein-stuff from near the surface yielded 

 about .£12 10s. of gold to the ton, and at a depth of between 30 

 and 40 feet Professor Chapman found the quartz to contain 3 dwts. 

 12 grs. of gold, and 1 oz. 11 dwts. 12 grs. of silver per ton ; but at 

 a depth of about 60 feet the vein became entirely barren of gold. 



At the Empire Mine, also situated in the township of Madoc, 

 both gold and silver have been obtained from a vein-stone contain- 

 ing arsenio-antimonial grey copper-ore, together with mispickel, 

 iron-pyrites, and bitter-spar. According to Professor Bell's assay, 

 the grey copper-ore contained 8 oz. 4 dwts. of gold, and 331 oz. of 

 silver to the ton of 2000 lbs., the value of which would be £95 ; 

 and this result was confirmed by Dr. Sterry Hunt, who found that 

 the dressed ore, when holding one-fourth its weight of vein-stone, 

 yielded 9*7 oz. of gold, and 120*7 oz. of silver to the ton of 

 2000 lbs. 



In the adjacent township of Marmora auriferous quartz has been 

 worked at the Feigle Mine, opened on lot sixteen in the eleventh 

 concession. The gold is here associated, as in so many other gold- 

 bearing localities, with a vitreous quartz more or less stained with 

 hydrous peroxide of iron. Mr. Bell has found that one sample of 

 this quartz yielded, by amalgamation, 3 oz. 13 dwts. 8 grs. per ton, 

 whilst another portion contained 7 oz. 15 dwts. 12 J grs. per ton. 

 [A specimen exhibited from the Feigle Mine showed the free gold 

 imbedded in a large prismatic crystal of liver-coloured Eisenkiesel, 

 or quartz charged with hydrous peroxide of iron.] 



At the Barry Mine, in the township of Elzevir, a dark crystal- 

 line limestone is crushed for gold. The mean of four assays of ore, 

 discovered in this township by Mr. SmaUfield, yielded gold to the 

 value of nearly .£8 per ton of 2000 lbs. 



From the township of Hungerford, quartz containing much iron- 

 pyrites has been found to contain both gold and silver, probably in 

 association with metallic sulphides. 



Nothing would be easier than to considerably extend this list of 

 gold-bearing localities. Indeed it appears that the metal is dis- 

 tributed, in greater or less quantity, through most of the schistose 

 rocks of the gold-mining region ; for I have invariably found that 

 these rocks yield, on assay, a notable amount of metallic sulphides 

 more or less auriferous. Probably the most advantageous mode of 

 treating these sulphides would be to smelt them to a rich regulus, 

 which might be then exported to England for extraction of the gold. 



Note. — The following assays of gold-bearing rocks, from the 

 Quinte gold-mining . district, by Professor Chapman, of University 



