ıo. Der Minister soll regelmäßig Publikationen herausgeben,
die vereinbar sind mit dem Regierungsinteresse und dem
Gebot industrieller Vorsicht,
a. Ores of the World
Abschrift aus: „The Far Eastern Review“, Nr. 5 vom Mai 1927,
S. 199.
The American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers
has appointed a committee of five to take up with Secretary Hoover
a proposed survey of the mineral resources of the world, to include
all minerals, metallic and non-metallic ores. The biggest indi-
vidual task would be in the United States where every base mineral
known is deposited.
The surveyors propose to list India’s stores of coal, copper, gold
and precious stones; to take cognizance of South Africa’s gold,
diamonds, coal and platinum; of Australia’s gold; of Argentina’s
petroleum, and of Austria’s coal and iron. In China’s eigtheen
provinces there are immens stores of coal and iron, many of them
undevelopped. Coal and iron and other minerals would be listed
in France, Germany, Hungary, Holland, Poland, Rumania, Russia,
Serbia, Spain and Sweden. In Turkey and Portugal the deposits
are undeveloped.
The survey would give some idea of how long the mineral re-
sources of the world might last, and there is always the chance
that it might discover new and valuable deposits. If this committee
could have free access to the highly mineralized areas of Central
Asia and report on the deposits of the Altais and Tibet as well as
make a final survey of the possibilities of China, it would easily
justify the expenditure on its work. Perhaps the easiest way 10
accomplish this would be to invite a few German mining experts
to sit on the committee. They have been all over the Central Asian
mineral fields and have reports on most of the deposits carefully
filed awav in Berlin.
2 Krahmann, Arbeitsgemeinschaft
177