Report of the Mineral Resources Contiguous to Line of Kansas City Southern Railway from Neosho, Mo. , to Texarkana, Texas

Report of the Mineral Resources Contiguous to Line of Kansas City Southern Railway from Neosho, Mo. , to Texarkana, Texas PDF

Author: George Downman Fitzhugh

Publisher: Rarebooksclub.com

Published: 2013-09

Total Pages: 26

ISBN-13: 9781230027166

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This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can usually download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1903 edition. Excerpt: ...City. Accordingly, the examinations were commenced where the "black shale of the Devonian Age"--the most prominent mark of the existence of phosphate r0ck--appeared en masse boldly. By referring to the attached plate (N0. 8), giving an ideal vertical section of this phosphate region, the relative position of the phosphate rock and accompanying rock strata will be best understood. Generally all of the rock strata are nearly level with a slight dip to southwestward. Occasionally a gentle reverse dip is found, but still the general dip is west of south. There are two strata of phosphate rock found in the region. The upper strata is located at the base of the black shale, and is of dark color; the lower strata is found in the Upper Silurian rocks, from fifty to two hundred feet below the upper strata, and is a white__-'ellow rock. In Kentucky, Tennessee, and Alabama, phosphate rock in various nodular shapes and sizes is found in the transition beds just at the top of black shale; but here in Missouri and Arkansas it is absent--that is, as far as the examinations were made. At Harper's Ford (Plate No. A) about a mile southeast from Lanagan. Mo., where the traveled road from Lanagan to Pineville, the county seat of McDonald County, Missouri, ' crosses_Indian Creek just below a mill-dam, the phosphate rock just at the base of the black shale is found on the east side of the creek. This rock strata has a dark appearance, rather silicious in appearance, with some iron pyrites, is "level in bed," with a gentle dip towards the east. The thickness varies from four inches-to two feet, as seen in the bed of the creek, the covering to the rock anywhere nearby being too heavy and thick and in disintegrated masses to prevent a more...