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TAILINGS AND DUMP.
237
solid cobbles and boulders by running water after lodg­ment in the beds of large streams, at a distance from the mine, is not great. When these materials are carried further forward by floods or torrents they move along the bottom until they find permanent lodgment, conse­quent upon a decrease in the grade of the bed of the stream or from some other cause. In water the weight of rocks is materially lessened, and the friction which would be due to their weight is correspondingly de­creased.
The constant collision and rubbing of the harder rocks against each other smooths and polishes them, somewhat changes their form and lessens their surface, and, to a certain extent, reduces them to fine powder but not to sand. Experiments made to ascertain the wear due to erosion of solid materials transported by rivers or streams tend to establish the fact that no perceptible deposit can be attributed to such cause, as the sediment from such wear is found to be a very fine powder, which immedi­ately passes off in suspension.
The distribution of gravels along the course of any stream will be found to be in accordance with their size, form and specific gravity, and distance from the source. Thus the material composing the bed of a stream, which may at its source consist entirely of large boulders and cobbles, will become finer and finer through the succes­sive stages of gravel, pebbles, and sand, until it is finally discharged as muddy water into the ocean.
Effects of Hydraulic Debris.—The working of hydraulic mines in California has here and there given rise to disputes with farmers. These disputes have, un­fortunately, been carried into the domain of local politics, and thereby not only brought into undue prominence, but also exaggerated, and an equitable settlement prevented. Meantime manipulators have taken advantage of the situ­ation to the detriment of both the farming and the mining interests.