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128                                          MINERAL RESOURCES.
On the whole 1906 was a very prosperous year for the mining industry. High prices for the metals stimulated prospecting and development work to an unusual degree. Wages showed a tendency to advance. There was a great scarcity of labor, and during the last months of the year the freight congestion on the railroads became so serious as to interfere with the operation of many smelting works and to delay shipments of ore.
The year was comparatively free from labor troubles, which, unfor­tunately, can not be said of 1907. In Arizona copper mining was especially active at Bisbee and Globe. Smelting works were built or enlarged. In California the advance in dredging operation was marked. Colorado suffered perhaps to some extent from the great attention given to Nevada and from some local causes, but neverthe­less experienced a very successful year. In Montana the Butte copper mines prospered and recorded an extremely heavy production of low-grade ore. Crowds of prospectors examined the ranges of Nevada, and Goldfield yielded millions in gold from the wonderfully rich ore of the Mohawk and Florence mines. Concentrating and cyanide mills were provided for Tonopah and projected for Goldfield. Con­centrating mills were built for the great low-grade copper deposits at Ely. In Utah most of the new activity centered at Bingham, where large quantities of low-grade copper ore were mined by steam shovels at a cost said to approach 30 cents per ton. Concentration and smelt­ing works were provided for these ores.
CLASSIFICATION OF ORES.
The gold and silver product is divided according to its derivation from placers, from dry or siliceous ores, copper ores, lead ores, zinc ores, copper-lead or copper-lead-zinc ores, and lead-zinc ores.
These divisions of the ores from the deep mines are, of course, to a certain degree arbitrary, and in many cases of complex ores doubt exists about their proper classification.
In general, ores which contain 2-1/2 per cent or more of copper are considered as copper ores, while those with over 4-1/2 per cent of lead are called lead ores. Special divisions of mixed ores, such as copper-lead and lead-zinc have been established. The bulk of the zinc ores contain at least 25 per cent of that metal. The classification is based on the quality of the ore as mined.
DISTRIBUTION OF THE GOLD PRODUCT OF 1906.
The following table shows the source of gold in the United States in 1906, by kinds of ore and by States: