ECONOMIC GEOLOGY
the pure water necessary to its health. In addition to the
study of these materials, the economic geologist is concerned
with the arrangement of rocks to facilitate their quarrying,
with the protection of coasts from attack by the sea, of
plains from devastation by rivers, of harbours from shoaling,
and of buildings from overthrow by earthquakes, with the
avoidance of hidden dangers in the selection of reservoir
sites, and the maintenance of public health by the utilization
of underground water and safe methods of drainage.
The problems of economic geology are complex owing to
the multiplicity of the materials, the variability of local
conditions, and the influence of prices and costs. A material
which in one place may be a valuable ore in another may be
commercially worthless. Profitable use is an essential factor
in the definition of the term ore. An ore is a material con-
taining sufficient metal to be worth mining under conditions
which either already exist at the locality, or may be reason-
ably expected.
MiNERAL—This term is used with two different meanings.
Mineral in the general sense is any inorganic material, and
includes animal and vegetable products which have been
buried in the earth and become part of its crust. Some
geologists limit the term to materials which have a definite
chemical composition, and usually a regular crystalline shape,
and regard coal, slate, limestone, mineral oil, oil shale, and
most ores as not minerals. The aim of this inconvenient
definition is to emphasize the distinction between simple
minerals and rocks. Before about 1850, rocks were regarded
as minerals ; the first editions of Dana’s System of Mineralogy
included a chapter on “Rocks or Mineral Aggregates.”
Lyell (Principles of Geology, 7th ed., 1847, p. 784) distin-
guished between * simple minerals ” and mineral aggregates.
Minerals were divided into two sections; simple minerals,
or mineral species, such as quartz and felspar, cannot be
divided into simpler constituents without chemical decom-
position ; compound or mixed minerals may be separated
into their components mechanically, as granite can be separ-
ated into its three mineral species, quartz, felspar, and
mica, by crushing and sorting the fragments. As academic
mineralogy developed it was limited to the study of mineral
species, and most compound minerals were left to the branch