Geological Sketch of Mexico: Geological Itineraries Part 3

Authors

  • José Guadalupe Aguilera Serrano Geological Institute of Mexico.
  • Ezequiel Ordóñez Aguilar Geological Institute of Mexico.
  • Rafael F. Buelna Geological Institute of Mexico.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.22201/10.22201/igl.01855530e.1986.6.137

Keywords:

Geological map, Geological itineraries, Instituto Nacional Geológico, Mineral deposits

Abstract

This issue actually constitutes the second edition of the Sketch of a Geological Map of the Mexican Republic, at a scale of 1:3,000,000; it consists of the explanatory text and the corrected version of the map. The first version of this map (reproduced in De Cserna, 1990, Plate 1), which was published in 1889—a year after the Geological Commission began operating—was created somewhat hastily, as it needed to be presented at the Paris World’s Fair held that year, by Antonio del Castillo. In the December 25, 1888 edition of the Diario Oficial, Article 2 stated: “The duties of the National Geological Institute are: I. - To create and publish the geological and mining maps of the Mexican Republic along with their corresponding reports” (Ordóñez, 1946). For this reason, Del Castillo intended to write an explanation of that map, but he died in 1895 before he could do so. Nevertheless, the map was revised between 1891 and 1893 and published at a scale of 1:10,000,000. José G. Aguilera, who succeeded Del Castillo as head of the Institute, undertook the revision of the original map and the preparation of its accompanying text, which was divided into three parts and preceded by a biographical summary of Antonio del Castillo and a prologue outlining the background of the Institute’s creation and the sources of information used for both the original sketch and the revised edition.

The third part, “Eruptive Rocks” (pp. 251-270), by Ezequiel Ordóñez, who was a specialist, among other fields, in the petrography of igneous rocks, is a list of such rocks in terms of their (also quoted verbatim): (1) nature; (2) relationships; (3) order of succession; (4) role in the structure and relief of the soil; and (5) importance
from a mining point of view, since most of our mineral deposits have a more or less intimate relationship with them.

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Abstract from:

Gómez-Caballero, J. A. (2005). Historia e índice comentado del Boletín del Instituto de Geología de la UNAM. Boletín de la Sociedad Geológica Mexicana: Volumen Conmemorativo del Centenario Aspectos históricos de la Geología Mexicana, 57I(2), 149-85. http://dx.doi.org/10.18268/BSGM2005v57n2a3

References

• Bárcena, M. (1875). Colección de fenómenos geológicos de Jalisco. Guadalajara.

• Hills, R. C. (s.f.). Tipes of parts eruptives in the Rocky Mountain. Proceedings of the Colorado Scientific Society.

• Le Conté, J. (1893). Origen of Mountain Ranges. Journal of Geology.

• Yddings, J.P. (1893). The volcanic rocks of the Andes. Journal Of Geology

Published

1896-02-11

Issue

Section

Boletín del Instituto de Geología