Record Details

Geographic factors as retardants to the development of Alaska's mineral industries

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Title Geographic factors as retardants to the development of Alaska's mineral industries
Names Francis, Karl Earvil (creator)
Highsmith, Richard M. Jr. (advisor)
Date Issued 1964-08-05 (iso8601)
Note Graduation date: 1965
Abstract The various elements of physical geography are commonly
entertained as factors retarding the mineral industries of Alaska. It
has been shown by numerous writers that the mineral industries of
Alaska are, indeed, in a difficult situation. Only the petroleum industry
and sand and gravel for construction are of much significance
to the Alaskan economy.
Alaska's location makes it difficult to use domestic markets
and turns the attention of all the resource-based primary industry
toward the Orient. Though close to Europe, Alaskan trade across
the Arctic Ocean yet awaits future transportation developments. The
strategic position of Alaska has very significantly affected Alaska's
primary industries by imposing stifling inflation on the state through
emergency military activity little concerned with economics. Statehood
and increased concern with the economy of Alaska by the
Federal government promises to improve Alaska's locational problems.
Alaska's size to some extent limits accessibility to the interior,
but it also provides Alaska with a high mineral resource potential
of great diversity and a very diverse landscape. The diversity of the
land is a retardant to the extent that complexity of environment is a
characteristic of Alaskan operations requiring a wide range of field
experience and field equipment. Experience in all Alaskan terrain
is quite rare.
The topography of Alaska limits the development of new transportational routes to the interior from the south coast. It does not
appreciably affect operational costs on existing roads and rails. Low
terrain subject to frost action is a greater operational problem. As
an underdeveloped land, Alaska is not unusually disadvantaged by
topography; it does, in fact, have some advantages. A great hydroelectric
potential exists in Alaska, but there is little chance that it
will be of any great value to the mineral industries at this stage.
Alaska has many diverse climates. South coastal Alaska has
a climate similar enough to southern climates to be considered insignificant
as a retardant to the mineral industries. In providing
frozen coasts to western and northern Alaska, climate seriously retards
development in these areas. Permafrost is a climatic resultant
offering some considerable but yet largely undetermined effect on the mineral industries. The colder parts of Alaska have their biggest effect
on the mineral industries in being different and, consequently,
foreign and discouraging to southern people. The inherent disadvantage
of cold is still largely obscured by blundering and inefficiency.
Alaska has a considerable and diverse mineral resource that
can, at this time, only be inferred. The unknown of Alaskan geology
is its most striking feature. Exploration in all aspects is seriously
discouraged by the economy and the obscuration of bed rock. Geophysical
and geochemical prospecting has met with little success.
It is felt that the lack of knowledge of and experience with the
land is the biggest retardant to Alaska's mineral industries. The
land is not inherently hostile, but rather it is different from that
familiar to most of the people on it. A two-pronged attack on ignorance
of the land is suggested, one to disseminate present knowledge
and the other to seek out the unknown. When Alaska acquires a people
familiar with and fully oriented toward the land, the effect of the geographic
factors presently retarding the mineral industries will be
greatly reduced.
Genre Thesis/Dissertation
Topic Mines and mineral resources -- Alaska
Identifier http://hdl.handle.net/1957/48636

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