﻿IRON 
  ORES 
  OF 
  THE 
  CLINTON 
  FORMATION 
  Jl 
  

  

  BIBLIOGRAPHY 
  

  

  The 
  following 
  is 
  a 
  list 
  of 
  publications 
  dealing 
  with 
  Clinton 
  ores 
  

   and 
  their 
  occurrence 
  in 
  New 
  York 
  State. 
  The 
  more 
  important 
  ones 
  

   have 
  been 
  reviewed 
  in 
  an 
  initial 
  section 
  of 
  this 
  report. 
  

  

  Ashburner, 
  C. 
  A. 
  Petroleum 
  and 
  Natural 
  Gas 
  in 
  New 
  York 
  State. 
  Am. 
  

   Inst. 
  Min. 
  Eng. 
  Trans, 
  v. 
  16. 
  1888. 
  

  

  Includes 
  a 
  number 
  of 
  well 
  sections 
  involving 
  the 
  Clinton 
  formation. 
  

  

  Beck, 
  L. 
  C. 
  Mineralogy 
  of 
  New 
  York. 
  1842. 
  

  

  Contains 
  brief 
  mention 
  of 
  the 
  ores, 
  with 
  analyses 
  of 
  samples 
  from 
  Wolcott 
  and 
  

   Rochester. 
  

  

  Chester, 
  Albert 
  H. 
  The 
  Iron 
  Region 
  of 
  Central 
  New 
  York. 
  

  

  An 
  address 
  delivered 
  before 
  the 
  Utica 
  Mercantile 
  and 
  Manufacturing 
  Association, 
  

   Utica, 
  N. 
  Y., 
  1 
  89 
  1. 
  

  

  Describes 
  the 
  Clinton 
  ores 
  found 
  in 
  Oneida 
  county 
  and 
  advocates 
  the 
  erection 
  of 
  

   local 
  blast 
  furnaces 
  for 
  their 
  treatment. 
  Gives 
  several 
  chemical 
  analyses. 
  

  

  Conrad, 
  T. 
  A. 
  First 
  Annual 
  Report 
  on 
  the 
  Geological 
  Survey 
  of 
  the 
  Third 
  

   District 
  of 
  New 
  York. 
  Albany 
  1840. 
  

  

  Briefly 
  describes 
  the 
  Clinton 
  in 
  western 
  New 
  York. 
  

  

  Eaton, 
  Amos. 
  A 
  Geological 
  and 
  Agricultural 
  Survey 
  of 
  the 
  District 
  Ad- 
  

   joining 
  the 
  Erie 
  Canal 
  in 
  the 
  State 
  of 
  New 
  York. 
  Albany 
  1829. 
  

   First 
  to 
  describe 
  the 
  ores 
  and 
  associated 
  strata. 
  

  

  Eckel, 
  E. 
  C. 
  The 
  Clinton 
  Hematite. 
  Eng. 
  & 
  Min. 
  Jour. 
  v. 
  79, 
  1905. 
  

  

  A 
  short 
  account 
  of 
  the 
  fossil 
  and 
  oolitic 
  beds 
  at 
  Clinton, 
  with 
  analyses. 
  

  

  Englehardt, 
  F. 
  E. 
  Annual 
  Report 
  of 
  the 
  Superintendent 
  of 
  the 
  Onondaga 
  

   Salt 
  Springs, 
  for 
  the 
  year 
  1884. 
  

  

  Gives 
  detailed 
  sections 
  of 
  two 
  well 
  borings 
  in 
  the 
  vicinity 
  of 
  Syracuse. 
  

  

  Foerste, 
  A. 
  F. 
  On 
  the 
  Clinton 
  Oolitic 
  Iron 
  Ores. 
  Am. 
  Jour. 
  Sci. 
  Ser. 
  

   3. 
  v. 
  41. 
  

  

  Refers 
  to 
  the 
  presence 
  of 
  fossils 
  in 
  the 
  ores 
  and 
  advocates 
  a 
  ieplacement 
  process 
  to 
  

   account 
  for 
  the 
  introduction 
  of 
  the 
  iron. 
  

  

  Hall, 
  James. 
  Second 
  Annual 
  Report 
  of 
  the 
  Fourth 
  Geological 
  District. 
  

  

  Albany 
  1840. 
  

   Geology 
  of 
  New 
  York, 
  part 
  IV, 
  comprising 
  survey 
  of 
  the 
  Fourth 
  

  

  Geological 
  District. 
  Albany 
  1843. 
  

  

  The 
  best 
  authority 
  on 
  the 
  Clinton 
  stratigraphy 
  in 
  western 
  New 
  York. 
  

  

  Palaeontology 
  of 
  New 
  York. 
  v. 
  2. 
  Albany 
  1852. 
  

  

  Contains 
  sections 
  of 
  the 
  Clinton 
  strata 
  in 
  Herkimer 
  and 
  Montgomery 
  counties. 
  

  

  Hartnagel, 
  C. 
  A. 
  Geologic 
  Map 
  of 
  the 
  Rochester 
  and 
  Ontario 
  Beach 
  Quad- 
  

   rangles. 
  N. 
  Y. 
  State 
  Mus. 
  Bui. 
  114. 
  1907. 
  

  

  Shows 
  the 
  Clinton 
  outcrop 
  within 
  this 
  area 
  and 
  describes 
  the 
  succession 
  of 
  

   strata 
  found 
  in 
  the 
  Genesee 
  gorge. 
  

  

  ^The 
  Clinton 
  Hematite. 
  N. 
  Y. 
  State 
  Mus. 
  Bui. 
  112. 
  1906. 
  

  

  Notes 
  on 
  recent 
  mining 
  developments 
  in 
  the 
  Clinton 
  belt. 
  

  

  Kimball, 
  James 
  P. 
  Genesis 
  of 
  Iron 
  Ores 
  by 
  Isomorphous 
  and 
  Pseudomor- 
  

   phous 
  Replacement 
  of 
  Limestone. 
  Am. 
  Geol. 
  v. 
  8. 
  1891. 
  

  

  Advances 
  the 
  replacement 
  hypothesis 
  for 
  the 
  Clinton 
  ores. 
  

  

  