Abstract
Fluids and sedimentary rocks accounted for 48 and 36 percent, respectively, of the total value of the 1946 domestic mineral production. The epigenetic (vein and replacement) and metamorphic deposits each contributed 6 percent of the total, and residual and igneous deposits accounted for 3 and 1 percent, respectively. Fuels were the most valuable of all the minerals produced--77 percent of the total. Petroleum, natural gas, and similar fluid fuels accounted for 47 percent of the total production and 98 percent of that from fluids; bituminous coal made up 24 percent of the total production and 67 percent of that from sedimentary rocks; anthracite coal was valued at 6 percent of the total production and 92 percent of that from metamorphic rocks. Exclusive of fuels, the bulk of the production of nonmetallics, and of the total mineral production too, was from sedimentary rocks (74 and 50 percent, respectively) and from veins and replacements (8 and 28 percent, respectively). Most of the production of metals, however, was from veins, etc. (62 percent) and residuum (29 percent).
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