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Southeast Missouri Lead District

The Southeast Missouri Lead District, commonly called the Lead Belt, is a lead mining district in the southeastern part of Missouri. Counties in the Lead Belt include Saint Francois, Crawford, Dent, Iron, Madison, Reynolds, and Washington. This mining district is the most important and critical lead producer in the United States.[1][2]

Map of counties in the region
Notable subdistricts of the Lead Belt and the mines of the "New Lead Belt"
Historical marker commemorating the first mine at Mine La Motte "about 1700".
Missouri Mines State Historic Site occupies a retired lead mill in the "old lead belt"

History edit

The potential for lead mining in Southeast Missouri was first discovered and documented in 1700 by Father James Gravier.[2] Philip Francois Renault of France led a large exploratory mission in 1719 and started mining operations in Old Mines and Mine La Motte in 1720, establishing the first lead mining subdistrict of Mine LaMotte-Fredericktown.[2]

Between the 1750s and 1799, production of lead in the region decreased. In 1799, Moses Austin settled in Potosi, originally known as Mine a Breton, bringing new mining methods and practices that revitalized lead mining in the district.[2] Austin was the first to sink deep mine shafts and start smelting operations, dramatically increasing lead production. Before this time, lead mines had been surface or near-surface mines of less than 10 feet in depth. In 1808, Moses Austin and Samuel Hammond established the city of Herculaneum as a shipping point closer to the mining region, replacing Ste. Genevieve as the main shipping point to and from the mining district on the Mississippi River.[2]

The Old Lead Belt Subdistrict was established in 1864 with the opening of the Bonne Terre Mine by the St. Joseph Lead Company.[2] Notable mines in the subdistrict region included the Bonne Terre Mine, and mines near Doe Run, Desloge, Flat River (Park Hills), and Leadwood. In 1972, the last Old Lead Belt mine at Flat River closed, ending 108 years of lead mining in the Old Lead Belt.

The area of mining has changed over the years. The Old Lead Belt is centered on Park Hills and Desloge, while the New Lead Belt or Viburnum Trend is near Viburnum. The Irish Wilderness in Ripley and Oregon Counties has significant lead ore; however, this is a protected wilderness area. Significant among Missouri's lead mining concerns in the district was the Desloge family and Desloge Consolidated Lead Company in Desloge, Missouri and Bonne Terre—having been active in lead trading, mining and smelting from 1823 in Potosi to 1929. Lead mining operations were consolidated under the control of St. Joe Lead.

In the late 1940s, reserves in the Old Lead Belt began to decline, spurring new mineral exploration in the Southeast Missouri region. In 1955, the St. Joseph Lead Company discovered a new orebody near Viburnum, Missouri, leading to the opening of the Viburnum No. 27 Mine in 1960.[2] The St. Joseph Lead Company, Cominco, Kennecott Copper, Amax, Inc., and Asarco companies conducted exploration that led to the opening of 10 additional mines, establishing what is known today as the Viburnum Trend, also called the New Lead Belt.[2]

The Viburnum Trend is the only subdistrict mined for lead in the Southeast Missouri Lead District in modern day. Six lead mines are currently operational in 2022: the Brushy Creek, Buick, Casteel, Fletcher, and Sweetwater mines.[3]

Today, many of the mines and mills of the Old Lead Belt have been abandoned or repurposed. Bonne Terre has large subterranean mines, now used commercially for recreational tourism and scuba diving. The Missouri Mines State Historic Site occupies the retired Federal Mill No. 3 in Park Hills.

Mineralogy and geology edit

The formal geological name for the Lead Belt is the "Southeastern Missouri Mississippi Valley-type Mineral District". It contains the highest concentration of galena (lead(II) sulfide) in the world[2] as well as significant economic quantities of zinc, copper and silver and currently mined sub-economic quantities of metals such as cadmium, nickel and cobalt.[2] Most of the mined ore minerals are found as sulfides, with the primary ore minerals galena and sphalerite, with minor sulfides pyrite, chalcopyrite, bornite, enargite, millerite, and arsenopyrite.[2] Gangue minerals associated with the economic minerals include marcasite, calcite, dolomite, and quartz.

Sulfide and carbonate mineral specimens are highly prized by gem and mineral collectors and are found in museums worldwide.

The ore minerals of the Old Lead Belt are hosted in the dolomite of the lower Bonneterre Formation, and can extend into the underlying Lamotte Sandstone and rarely into the overlying Davis Formation. In the Viburnum Trend, lead-zinc ore mineralization is hosted in the bacterial stromatolite reefs dolomites of the upper Bonneterre Formation,[4] and most orebodies are concentrated in areas where the Lamotte Sandstone pinches out against Precambrian igneous knobs and ridges.[5] The Upper Cambrian age Bonneterre Formation was deposited in a shallow sea around the Precambrian age St. Francois Mountains, which formed an island archipelago. Ore mineralization most likely occurred during the Permian, when low-temperature hydrothermal metal-rich brines migrated through the Ozarks during the Ouachita orogeny in the Late Paleozoic.[6][7][4][5]

Ore mineralization in the Lead Belt occurred as part of the same mineralization event, however, the intensity of mineralization and depositional controls differ between the Viburnum Trend and Old Lead Belt.[8] In the Old Lead Belt, galena is more fine-grained and disseminated into the host rock, and large, euhedral crystals are rare. Ore is mostly constrained to the lower 60 feet of the Bonneterre Formation, and preferentially follow the lateral sedimentary beds and features. In the Viburnum Trend, zinc and copper are found in higher concentrations, and galena was able to form larger, more euhedral crystals. Ore mineralization in this subdistrict is prominently emplaced along collapse breccias, and not as influenced by lateral sedimentary features as in the Old Lead Belt. Ore in the Viburnum Trend can be found throughout the entire vertical extent of the Bonneterre Formation, but is mostly constrained to the upper 75 feet.[8]

Production edit

The Lead Belt produces about 70% of the US primary supply of lead, and significant amounts of the nation's zinc.[1] In the year 2000, Missouri produced 313,105 tons, with an estimated value of $128,838,880, according to Missouri DNR Data. About 84% of the lead is used for lead–acid batteries, and a secondary smelter in Boss, Missouri recycles lead–acid batteries. Another major consumer of Missouri lead is Winchester Ammunition, located in East Alton, Illinois.

From 1720 to its closure in 1959, the Mine La Motte-Fredericktown Subdistrict produced over 325,000 tons of lead. From 1864 to 1972, over 8.5 million tons of lead was produced from the Old Lead Belt Subdistrict.[2] The Viburnum Trend is the only subdistrict still in production, and is primarily mined by The Doe Run Company. From 1960 to 2022, The Doe Run Company has reported that nearly 315 million tons of ore has been extracted from the Viburnum Trend.[3]

Communities in the Lead Belt edit

Politics edit

Year Democrat Republican Third Party
# % # % # %
2020 14,510 20.83% 54,183 77.78% 965 1.39%
2016 13,456 21.24% 47,521 75.01% 2,372 3.74%
2012 21,196 35.53% 37,046 62.09% 1,420 2.38%
2008 27,890 43.69% 34,795 54.50% 1,158 1.81%
2004 26,282 43.26% 34,061 56.06% 414 0.68%
2000 23,481 44.04% 28,556 53.56% 1,277 2.40%
1996 25,135 49.72% 17,817 35.24% 7,601 15.04%
1992 26,804 49.40% 16,727 30.83% 10,729 19.77%
1988 23,744 50.05% 23,561 49.67% 134 0.28%
1984 21,189 42.90% 28,207 57.10% 0 0%
1980 23,329 44.41% 27,817 52.95% 1,389 2.64%
1976 25,909 56.69% 19,568 42.81% 229 0.50%
1972 14,673 35.35% 26,830 64.65% 0 0%
1968 17,125 39.70% 20,689 47.96% 5,327 12.35%
1964 28,062 64.04% 15,760 35.96% 0 0%
1960 19,603 42% 27,066 58% 0 0%
1956 21,208 45.02% 25,903 54.98% 0 0%
1952 22,700 47.56% 24,974 52.32% 59 0.12%
1948 22,019 55.88% 17,300 43.90% 88 0.22%
1944 19,971 49.12% 20,630 50.74% 55 0.14%
1940 24,156 49.54% 24,515 50.28% 87 0.18%
1936 24,077 54.27% 20,067 45.23% 218 0.49%
1932 24,822 60.51% 15,836 38.60% 365 0.89%
1928 13,859 37.84% 22,674 61.91% 90 0.25%
1924 16,619 49.22% 16,399 48.57% 745 2.21%
1920 15,986 46.82% 17,619 51.61% 535 1.57%
1916 11,384 51.45% 10,262 46.38% 479 2.16%
1912 9,225 47.85% 7,228 37.49% 2,825 14.65%
1908 10,166 46.97% 10,675 49.32% 803 3.71%
1904 9,129 47.73% 9,537 49.87% 319 1.67%
1900 10,056 53.36% 8,575 45.51% 213 1.13%
1896 9,866 56.52% 7,527 43.12% 64 0.37%
1892 8,681 57.71% 6,102 40.56% 260 1.73%
1888 8,878 56.48% 6,485 41.25% 357 2.27%
1884 8,097 61.16% 5,055 38.19% 86 0.65%
1880 7,964 64.38% 4,160 33.63% 246 1.99%
1876 7,697 68.82% 3,461 30.94% 27 0.24%
1872 4,822 62.91% 2,843 37.09% 0 0%
1868 2,199 54.31% 1,850 45.69% 0 0%
1864 717 24.41% 2,220 75.59% 0 0%
1860 2,380 43.19% 211 3.83% 2,920 52.98%
1856 2,481 57.13% 0 0% 1,862 42.87%
1852 1,594 60.38% 1,046 39.62% 0 0%
1848 1,497 54.02% 1,274 45.98% 0 0%
1844 1,588 54.35% 1,334 45.65% 0 0%
1840 1,312 54.58% 1,092 45.42% 0 0%
1836 703 58.29% 503 41.71% 0 0%
1832 Incomplete returns Incomplete returns Incomplete returns
1828 816 70.89% 335 29.11% 0 0%

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Southeast Missouri Mining and Milling". Doe Run Company. 2004. Retrieved April 5, 2010.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l http://pubs.usgs.gov/sir/2008/5140/pdf/Chapter1.pdf Seeger, Cheryl M., History of Mining in the Southeast Missouri Lead District and Description of Mine Processes, Regulatory Controls, Environmental Effects, and Mine Facilities in the Viburnum Trend Subdistrict in Kleeschulte, M.J., ed., 2008, Hydrologic investigations concerning lead mining issues in southeastern Missouri: U.S. Geological Survey Scientific Investigations Report 2008–5140, Chapter 1
  3. ^ a b The Doe Run Company (March 2022). "Doe Run Backgrounder: About The Doe Run Company" (PDF). doerun.com. Retrieved December 13, 2022.
  4. ^ a b Sverjensky, Dimitri A. (November 1, 1981). "The origin of a mississippi valley-type deposit in the Viburnum Trend, Southeast Missouri". Economic Geology. 76 (7): 1848–1872. Bibcode:1981EcGeo..76.1848S. doi:10.2113/gsecongeo.76.7.1848. ISSN 1554-0774.
  5. ^ a b Kisvarsanyi, G. (May 1, 1977). "The role of the Precambrian igneous basement in the formation of the stratabound lead-zinc-copper deposits in Southeast Missouri". Economic Geology. 72 (3): 435–442. Bibcode:1977EcGeo..72..435K. doi:10.2113/gsecongeo.72.3.435. ISSN 1554-0774.
  6. ^ Guilbert, John M. and Charles F. Park, Jr., The Geology of Ore Deposits, Freeman, 1986 pp. 890-901 ISBN 0-7167-1456-6
  7. ^ Appold, Martin S.; Garven, Grant (September 1, 1999). "The hydrology of ore formation in the Southeast Missouri District; numerical models of topography-driven fluid flow during the Ouachita Orogeny". Economic Geology. 94 (6): 913–935. Bibcode:1999EcGeo..94..913A. doi:10.2113/gsecongeo.94.6.913. ISSN 1554-0774.
  8. ^ a b Ohle, Ernest L. (December 1, 1990). "A comparison of the old lead belt and the new lead belt in Southeast Missouri". Economic Geology. 85 (8): 1894–1895. Bibcode:1990EcGeo..85.1894O. doi:10.2113/gsecongeo.85.8.1894. ISSN 1554-0774.

External links edit

  • Missouri Mines State Historic Site
  • PDF

37°30′N 90°30′W / 37.5°N 90.5°W / 37.5; -90.5

southeast, missouri, lead, district, lead, belt, redirects, here, concentration, wargames, companies, england, lead, belt, wargaming, commonly, called, lead, belt, lead, mining, district, southeastern, part, missouri, counties, lead, belt, include, saint, fran. Lead belt redirects here For the concentration of wargames companies in England see Lead belt wargaming The Southeast Missouri Lead District commonly called the Lead Belt is a lead mining district in the southeastern part of Missouri Counties in the Lead Belt include Saint Francois Crawford Dent Iron Madison Reynolds and Washington This mining district is the most important and critical lead producer in the United States 1 2 Map of counties in the regionNotable subdistricts of the Lead Belt and the mines of the New Lead Belt Historical marker commemorating the first mine at Mine La Motte about 1700 Missouri Mines State Historic Site occupies a retired lead mill in the old lead belt Contents 1 History 2 Mineralogy and geology 3 Production 4 Communities in the Lead Belt 5 Politics 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistory editThe potential for lead mining in Southeast Missouri was first discovered and documented in 1700 by Father James Gravier 2 Philip Francois Renault of France led a large exploratory mission in 1719 and started mining operations in Old Mines and Mine La Motte in 1720 establishing the first lead mining subdistrict of Mine LaMotte Fredericktown 2 Between the 1750s and 1799 production of lead in the region decreased In 1799 Moses Austin settled in Potosi originally known as Mine a Breton bringing new mining methods and practices that revitalized lead mining in the district 2 Austin was the first to sink deep mine shafts and start smelting operations dramatically increasing lead production Before this time lead mines had been surface or near surface mines of less than 10 feet in depth In 1808 Moses Austin and Samuel Hammond established the city of Herculaneum as a shipping point closer to the mining region replacing Ste Genevieve as the main shipping point to and from the mining district on the Mississippi River 2 The Old Lead Belt Subdistrict was established in 1864 with the opening of the Bonne Terre Mine by the St Joseph Lead Company 2 Notable mines in the subdistrict region included the Bonne Terre Mine and mines near Doe Run Desloge Flat River Park Hills and Leadwood In 1972 the last Old Lead Belt mine at Flat River closed ending 108 years of lead mining in the Old Lead Belt The area of mining has changed over the years The Old Lead Belt is centered on Park Hills and Desloge while the New Lead Belt or Viburnum Trend is near Viburnum The Irish Wilderness in Ripley and Oregon Counties has significant lead ore however this is a protected wilderness area Significant among Missouri s lead mining concerns in the district was the Desloge family and Desloge Consolidated Lead Company in Desloge Missouri and Bonne Terre having been active in lead trading mining and smelting from 1823 in Potosi to 1929 Lead mining operations were consolidated under the control of St Joe Lead In the late 1940s reserves in the Old Lead Belt began to decline spurring new mineral exploration in the Southeast Missouri region In 1955 the St Joseph Lead Company discovered a new orebody near Viburnum Missouri leading to the opening of the Viburnum No 27 Mine in 1960 2 The St Joseph Lead Company Cominco Kennecott Copper Amax Inc and Asarco companies conducted exploration that led to the opening of 10 additional mines establishing what is known today as the Viburnum Trend also called the New Lead Belt 2 The Viburnum Trend is the only subdistrict mined for lead in the Southeast Missouri Lead District in modern day Six lead mines are currently operational in 2022 the Brushy Creek Buick Casteel Fletcher and Sweetwater mines 3 Today many of the mines and mills of the Old Lead Belt have been abandoned or repurposed Bonne Terre has large subterranean mines now used commercially for recreational tourism and scuba diving The Missouri Mines State Historic Site occupies the retired Federal Mill No 3 in Park Hills Mineralogy and geology editThe formal geological name for the Lead Belt is the Southeastern Missouri Mississippi Valley type Mineral District It contains the highest concentration of galena lead II sulfide in the world 2 as well as significant economic quantities of zinc copper and silver and currently mined sub economic quantities of metals such as cadmium nickel and cobalt 2 Most of the mined ore minerals are found as sulfides with the primary ore minerals galena and sphalerite with minor sulfides pyrite chalcopyrite bornite enargite millerite and arsenopyrite 2 Gangue minerals associated with the economic minerals include marcasite calcite dolomite and quartz Sulfide and carbonate mineral specimens are highly prized by gem and mineral collectors and are found in museums worldwide The ore minerals of the Old Lead Belt are hosted in the dolomite of the lower Bonneterre Formation and can extend into the underlying Lamotte Sandstone and rarely into the overlying Davis Formation In the Viburnum Trend lead zinc ore mineralization is hosted in the bacterial stromatolite reefs dolomites of the upper Bonneterre Formation 4 and most orebodies are concentrated in areas where the Lamotte Sandstone pinches out against Precambrian igneous knobs and ridges 5 The Upper Cambrian age Bonneterre Formation was deposited in a shallow sea around the Precambrian age St Francois Mountains which formed an island archipelago Ore mineralization most likely occurred during the Permian when low temperature hydrothermal metal rich brines migrated through the Ozarks during the Ouachita orogeny in the Late Paleozoic 6 7 4 5 Ore mineralization in the Lead Belt occurred as part of the same mineralization event however the intensity of mineralization and depositional controls differ between the Viburnum Trend and Old Lead Belt 8 In the Old Lead Belt galena is more fine grained and disseminated into the host rock and large euhedral crystals are rare Ore is mostly constrained to the lower 60 feet of the Bonneterre Formation and preferentially follow the lateral sedimentary beds and features In the Viburnum Trend zinc and copper are found in higher concentrations and galena was able to form larger more euhedral crystals Ore mineralization in this subdistrict is prominently emplaced along collapse breccias and not as influenced by lateral sedimentary features as in the Old Lead Belt Ore in the Viburnum Trend can be found throughout the entire vertical extent of the Bonneterre Formation but is mostly constrained to the upper 75 feet 8 nbsp Cubic galena lead ore from the Sweetwater Mine of the Viburnum Trend Reynolds County Missouri nbsp Sphalerite galena and marcasite from the Viburnum Trend District Reynolds County Missouri nbsp Calcite and chalcopyrite specimen from the Brushy Creek Mine of the Viburnum Trend District Reynolds County Missouri Production editThe Lead Belt produces about 70 of the US primary supply of lead and significant amounts of the nation s zinc 1 In the year 2000 Missouri produced 313 105 tons with an estimated value of 128 838 880 according to Missouri DNR Data About 84 of the lead is used for lead acid batteries and a secondary smelter in Boss Missouri recycles lead acid batteries Another major consumer of Missouri lead is Winchester Ammunition located in East Alton Illinois From 1720 to its closure in 1959 the Mine La Motte Fredericktown Subdistrict produced over 325 000 tons of lead From 1864 to 1972 over 8 5 million tons of lead was produced from the Old Lead Belt Subdistrict 2 The Viburnum Trend is the only subdistrict still in production and is primarily mined by The Doe Run Company From 1960 to 2022 The Doe Run Company has reported that nearly 315 million tons of ore has been extracted from the Viburnum Trend 3 Communities in the Lead Belt editArcadia Belgrade Bismarck Bonne Terre Boss Bourbon Bunker Cadet Caledonia Centerville Cobalt Cuba Davisville Desloge Doe Run Ellington Farmington Frankclay Fredericktown Irondale Ironton Leadington Leadwood Lesterville Mine La Motte Old Mines Park Hills Pilot Knob Potosi Reynolds Richwoods Salem Steelville Sullivan ViburnumPolitics editYear Democrat Republican Third Party 2020 14 510 20 83 54 183 77 78 965 1 39 2016 13 456 21 24 47 521 75 01 2 372 3 74 2012 21 196 35 53 37 046 62 09 1 420 2 38 2008 27 890 43 69 34 795 54 50 1 158 1 81 2004 26 282 43 26 34 061 56 06 414 0 68 2000 23 481 44 04 28 556 53 56 1 277 2 40 1996 25 135 49 72 17 817 35 24 7 601 15 04 1992 26 804 49 40 16 727 30 83 10 729 19 77 1988 23 744 50 05 23 561 49 67 134 0 28 1984 21 189 42 90 28 207 57 10 0 0 1980 23 329 44 41 27 817 52 95 1 389 2 64 1976 25 909 56 69 19 568 42 81 229 0 50 1972 14 673 35 35 26 830 64 65 0 0 1968 17 125 39 70 20 689 47 96 5 327 12 35 1964 28 062 64 04 15 760 35 96 0 0 1960 19 603 42 27 066 58 0 0 1956 21 208 45 02 25 903 54 98 0 0 1952 22 700 47 56 24 974 52 32 59 0 12 1948 22 019 55 88 17 300 43 90 88 0 22 1944 19 971 49 12 20 630 50 74 55 0 14 1940 24 156 49 54 24 515 50 28 87 0 18 1936 24 077 54 27 20 067 45 23 218 0 49 1932 24 822 60 51 15 836 38 60 365 0 89 1928 13 859 37 84 22 674 61 91 90 0 25 1924 16 619 49 22 16 399 48 57 745 2 21 1920 15 986 46 82 17 619 51 61 535 1 57 1916 11 384 51 45 10 262 46 38 479 2 16 1912 9 225 47 85 7 228 37 49 2 825 14 65 1908 10 166 46 97 10 675 49 32 803 3 71 1904 9 129 47 73 9 537 49 87 319 1 67 1900 10 056 53 36 8 575 45 51 213 1 13 1896 9 866 56 52 7 527 43 12 64 0 37 1892 8 681 57 71 6 102 40 56 260 1 73 1888 8 878 56 48 6 485 41 25 357 2 27 1884 8 097 61 16 5 055 38 19 86 0 65 1880 7 964 64 38 4 160 33 63 246 1 99 1876 7 697 68 82 3 461 30 94 27 0 24 1872 4 822 62 91 2 843 37 09 0 0 1868 2 199 54 31 1 850 45 69 0 0 1864 717 24 41 2 220 75 59 0 0 1860 2 380 43 19 211 3 83 2 920 52 98 1856 2 481 57 13 0 0 1 862 42 87 1852 1 594 60 38 1 046 39 62 0 0 1848 1 497 54 02 1 274 45 98 0 0 1844 1 588 54 35 1 334 45 65 0 0 1840 1 312 54 58 1 092 45 42 0 0 1836 703 58 29 503 41 71 0 0 1832 Incomplete returns Incomplete returns Incomplete returns1828 816 70 89 335 29 11 0 0 See also editCarbonate hosted lead zinc ore deposits Doe Run Company Missouri Mines State Historic Site St Joe State Park Mississippi River and Bonne Terre RailwayReferences edit a b Southeast Missouri Mining and Milling Doe Run Company 2004 Retrieved April 5 2010 a b c d e f g h i j k l http pubs usgs gov sir 2008 5140 pdf Chapter1 pdf Seeger Cheryl M History of Mining in the Southeast Missouri Lead District and Description of Mine Processes Regulatory Controls Environmental Effects and Mine Facilities in the Viburnum Trend Subdistrict in Kleeschulte M J ed 2008 Hydrologic investigations concerning lead mining issues in southeastern Missouri U S Geological Survey Scientific Investigations Report 2008 5140 Chapter 1 a b The Doe Run Company March 2022 Doe Run Backgrounder About The Doe Run Company PDF doerun com Retrieved December 13 2022 a b Sverjensky Dimitri A November 1 1981 The origin of a mississippi valley type deposit in the Viburnum Trend Southeast Missouri Economic Geology 76 7 1848 1872 Bibcode 1981EcGeo 76 1848S doi 10 2113 gsecongeo 76 7 1848 ISSN 1554 0774 a b Kisvarsanyi G May 1 1977 The role of the Precambrian igneous basement in the formation of the stratabound lead zinc copper deposits in Southeast Missouri Economic Geology 72 3 435 442 Bibcode 1977EcGeo 72 435K doi 10 2113 gsecongeo 72 3 435 ISSN 1554 0774 Guilbert John M and Charles F Park Jr The Geology of Ore Deposits Freeman 1986 pp 890 901 ISBN 0 7167 1456 6 Appold Martin S Garven Grant September 1 1999 The hydrology of ore formation in the Southeast Missouri District numerical models of topography driven fluid flow during the Ouachita Orogeny Economic Geology 94 6 913 935 Bibcode 1999EcGeo 94 913A doi 10 2113 gsecongeo 94 6 913 ISSN 1554 0774 a b Ohle Ernest L December 1 1990 A comparison of the old lead belt and the new lead belt in Southeast Missouri Economic Geology 85 8 1894 1895 Bibcode 1990EcGeo 85 1894O doi 10 2113 gsecongeo 85 8 1894 ISSN 1554 0774 External links editMissouri Mines State Historic Site Map of the Mineral resources of Missouri PDF 37 30 N 90 30 W 37 5 N 90 5 W 37 5 90 5 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Southeast Missouri Lead District amp oldid 1192250713, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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