6i 
DIVISION OF ECONOMIC GEOLOGY. 
It is the purpose of the collections shown in this Division to 
illustrate modes of occurrence in Nature of the minerals and ores 
which have economic importance, to show the localities from which 
they are obtained, the processes used in their extraction and treat- 
ment and their applications to human arts and industries. 
The specimens have for the most part been gathered from 
exhibits made in the Department of Mines and Mining of the 
Columbian Exposition, and were secured to the Museum by the 
Chief of that Department. 
They may be conveniently classified into four groups which 
can be most readily inspected in the order named. 
Building Stones and Quarry Products, Halls 67 and 68. 
Carbon Minerals, including Coals, Petroleum, etc.. Halls 69, 
70 and 71. 
Ores and Products of the Precious Metals and Lead, Hall 72. 
Ores and Products of the Useful Metals, Hall 79. 
Fictile Materials and Non-Metallic Minerals of use in the 
Arts, Halls 77 and 78. 
There are also included in this Division, a Departmental 
Library and Laboratory, the office of the Curator and the section 
of Metal Working Industries of the Department of Industrial Arts. 
In the arrangement of the collections a series of type speci- 
mens of each group of minerals, is placed first. Then follow speci- 
mens illustrating different localities, arranged in geographical 
order, passing eastward from California. Then are illustrated, so 
far as the material at hand permits, methods of mining, processes 
of reduction or manufacture and finished products showing the 
uses of the metal or mineral. 
The collections include, among other unique features, the 
Kunz collection of platinum ores and concentrates, a valuable col- 
lection of gold nuggets, from the placer mines of the State of 
Washington, the large and complete collection of mineral oils and 
their products, made by the Standard Oil Company, the statistical 
column prepared by the United States Geological Survey, and 
a unique series of transparencies enlarged from wood engravings 
in De Re Metallica, showing processes of mining and metallurgy 
in the sixteenth century. 
