Abstract
MANY of your readers are aware that the fact of the occurrence of gold in Lower Carboniferous conglomerate as in New South Wales is not at all new. The Gay's River Gold Field of Nova Scotia, where the gold occurs in Lower Carboniferous conglomerate resting on the edges of Cambrian slates having small veins of auriferous quartz, was first pointed out by Prof. Hartt and elaborated by myself in a paper communicated to the Nova Scotian Institute of Natural Science in 1866. In Dawson's “Accadian Geology,” of 1868, the same fact is referred to; also in Seluria, Prof. R. Jones received specimens of the conglomerate from me in Paris, 1867, to satisfy Sir R. J. Murchison of the fact. In the collection of ores and concrete minerals sent by H. S. Poole, Esq., Government Inspector of Mines to the Centennial Exhibition, in my charge, was a very instructive specimen of slate with a little of the conglomerate attached, having a beautiful display of gold. This was much admired. The conglomerate of Gay's River is overlaid by limestone with Lower Carboniferous fauna and gypsums. The conglomerate is worked still with good results.
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HONEYMAN, D. Gold in Carboniferous Conglomerate. Nature 16, 62 (1877). https://doi.org/10.1038/016062a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/016062a0
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