Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Economic significance of revised age relations of rocks in the Cornucopia mining district, Elko County, Nevada

January 1, 1967

Recent geologic work in the Cornucopia mining district, a small silver-gold mining district in northwestern Elko County, Nev., has resulted in significant revision of the geological interpretation. Rocks formerly thought to be premineralization in age, but unmineralized, are now known to be postmineral extrusives, resting unconformably on the altered andesite in which the ore bodies are found. Extensions of the known productive veins may be expected at shallow depth beneath the younger volcanic rocks, and are separated from the mined part of the veins by postmineral high-angle faults that have brought the younger volcanic rocks into fault contact with the mineralized andesite. Some veins are apparently terminated against premineral faults.

Publication Year 1967
Title Economic significance of revised age relations of rocks in the Cornucopia mining district, Elko County, Nevada
DOI 10.3133/cir549
Authors Robert Roy Coats
Publication Type Report
Publication Subtype USGS Numbered Series
Series Title Circular
Series Number 549
Index ID cir549
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse