THE FORMATION OF DEPOSITS 17 sand and clay. Some constituents of the lithosphere are deposited chemically or organically in such beds as gypsum, salt, limestone, coal, and ironstones, The barysphere doubtless passes to the lithosphere through an ore-zome, rich in silicates and metallic sulphides. Above the ore-zone is a basic’ zone composed mainly of heavy silicates, and known as the sima from the first letters of its chief constituents, silica and magnesia ; still higher is an acid-zone of light silicates, with much alumina and alkalis ; it is known as sial, from the symbols of silicon and aluminium. The upper part of the lithosphere would probably at first have contained but few metals. The metallic constituents of the barysphere, ore-zone, and sima have been raised to the surface by the intrusion of basic igneous rocks, which have carried upward large quantities of iron and manganese, and facilitated the ascent from the ore-zone of mineralized water, SOURCE OF THE METALS In OrES—Some species of pyroxene, amphibole, and olivine contain iron and manganese as essential constituents; and gs metals in nature are seldom pure it is not surprising that small quantities of copper, cobalt, ind nickel are found in ferro-magnesian minerals, The search for various metals in igneous rocks was inspired by the theory of Bischoff (1847) that the contents of lodes are derived from the rocks beside them by lateral secretion. His disciples, such as Forchhammer {1855) and F. Sandberger (1882 and 1885), claimed to have found all the common metals in the minerals of igneous rocks. Thus olivine, augite, and hornblende yielded Sandberger arsenic, bismuth, cobalt, copper, lead, nickel, tin, uranium, and zinc; and the Micas yielded arsenic, bismuth, copper, lead, tin, uranium, and zine. "Many later chemists! have reported traces of the less common metals in igneous rocks. Some of these claims are dubious, as the amounts are too small for reliable determina- tion. In other cases the elements have been introduced after the formation of the rock and are secondary constituents; ©-g. the oft-quoted gold in the diorite of the Ayrshire Mine, 'E.g. copper in fresh olivine dolerite in the Globe district, Arizona ; Ransome, U.S.G.S., Prof. Pap. 12, 1903, P. 128; J.H. I, Vogt estimates the amount of nickel as ‘03 per cent. in gabbros and norites, and ‘0005 Per cent, in granite, Zcon. Geol., xviii, 1923, p. 328.