Many structural domes and anticlines rise from undeformed surroundings; the general crust of the earth is neither shortened nor extended by these local swells or blisters, but the area of the plate upfolded is increased. With plastic material the increase is effected largely by flow; with brittle material, largely by fracture.Many mining districts are associated with upfolds of this type. Districts here described fall into two categories: (1) those whose structural frame is a dome, and (2) those whose structural frame is an anticline.Domes may show fractures which radiate from the apex, or concentric fractures which are segments of circles, of varying diameters but with a common center, the apex of the dome. Both types may appear on the same dome; the fractures of each type aid enlargement of the plate during doming.Sunlight and Kirwin, Wyoming, are minor districts with dominant radial fracture patterns. Vein matter was deposited while the walls of the vein fractures were being pulled apart. With a radial vein system the only way in which all the vein walls could be simultaneously pulled apart is by stretching of the fabric of an expanding dome.The structural setting of the Ophir, Utah, lead-silver district, and of the Matehuala, Mexico, copper district is that of a half dome truncated by a normal fault with downthrow away from the domical apex. Displacement on the fault is greatest opposite the apex and decreases progressively in both directions, becoming zero at the spring line. No part of the dome ever existed on the downthrown side of the fault, which was a fracture before doming. Maximum uplift was centered on one side of the fault and there produced the half dome; but the pre-existing fracture offered locally an easier mode of uplift by rise of the footwall block.At Ophir ore shoots followed intersections on the half dome of radial fractures with limestone beds. At Matehuala stretching during doming was effected largely by flow of limestone, but a monzonite stock intruded in the half dome was too brittle to flow. The limestone pulled away from the unyielding stock; fractures concentrated around the periphery of the stock localized the Dolores copper ore bodies.In the Silverton-Telluride district, Colorado, fractures radiate from a relatively large, roughly circular graben, along whose margin monzonitic stocks were intruded. Evidence suggests that this fracture pattern resulted from domical uplift, with the graben at the apex. Transfer of volcanic material from depth to the surface in the central area produced a sag which has eliminated the upward bulge of the dome.Mineralization advanced outward from the graben step by step with the outward growth of the radial fractures. Copper-silver pipes within the fault zone bounding the graben were formed first, followed successively outward by basemetal deposits as veins, which were reopened to admit gold and silver, and by precious-metal vein deposits in the outermost zone.The structural setting of La Plata, Colorado, is that of a dome, truncated, south of its apex,...