8
OUR MINERAL RESERVES.
tins already published has devolved principally upon the geologists
of the Survey, who for several years have made a special study of
the country’s mineral resources. The specialists who have thus
contributed to this bulletin are Edson S. Bastin, Ernest F. Burchard,
B. S. Butler, David T. Day, J. P. Dunlop, Frank L. Hess, J. M. Hill,
Edward W. Parker, W. C. Phalen, and C. E. Siebenthal.
GOVERNMENT PUBLICATIONS.
Several reports issued by the Government will be especially useful
to those who are interested in mineral supplies. These publications
furnish authoritative answers to many of the inquiries now made
by importers and domestic consumers and by exporters and foreign
buyers. 1
The Geological Survey issues an annual report on " Mineral Re
sources of the United States,” which is published finally in two
bound volumes, but at first in about 65 separate chapters, which are
issued as pamphlets several months in advance of the bound volumes.
Each of these chapters treats of an important mineral product.
Other annual publications of the Survey that contain reports on
the country’s mineral resources are the bulletins entitled “ Contribu
tions to Economic Geology,” published in two series—(I) metals and
non metals except fuels, (II) mineral fuels—and “Mineral Resources
of Alaska,” the report on the progress of investigations in Alaska.
The separate papers in these bulletins are also issued in the form of
advance chapters and include brief reports on geologic investiga
tions in mining regions or on newly discovered deposits or recently
opened mining districts. Examples of such chapters recently issued
that are of interest in connection with the present discussion are
entitled “ Potash in western saline deposits,” “ Nitrate near Melrose,
Mont.,” “Late developments of magnesite deposits in California and
Nevada,” “Analyses of coal samples from various fields in the United
States,” and “A barite deposit near Wrangell, Alaska.”
Another recent Survey publication is a bulletin entitled “Useful
Minerals of the United States” (Bulletin 585), which may be de
scribed as a directory of all the minerals that are now of recognized
utility, with a list of localities at which these minerals occur in suffi
cient quantity to be of present or possible future value. The direc
tory of minerals is well supplemented by another bulletin of the
Geological Survey, entitled “The Mining Districts of the Western
United States” (Bulletin 507), which furnishes a complete index to
the mineral-producing centers of the western part of the country.
A series of maps showing the quarry localities of the country is
contained in the 1911, 1912, and 1913 volumes of “Mineral Resources
1 The publications here mentioned, issued by the United States Geological Survey, the
Bureau of Mines, and the Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerce, may be obtained
free, until the editions are exhausted, on application to the respective bureaus at Wash
ington, D. C.