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Info Database Last Updated 08.04.2024 (Entity News entries: 29)
Type/Category of Info:
General Mining News
Info Source From:
The Mining and Scientific Press. Volume: 123 [CXXIII], Issue No. 5Info Publication Date:
July 30, 1921Info found on page:
167Info Title:
Buena Vista Active Again
The Buena Vista workings, Isabella Mines Co., are again active under lease. A shipment was made recently.
Above Info was Last Updated on 30.10.2020 (11:04:30)
Above Info was First Seen 14.02.2020
Type/Category of Info:
General Mining News
Info Source From:
The Mining and Scientific Press. Volume: 122 [CXXII], Issue No. 23Info Publication Date:
June 4, 1921Info found on page:
790Info Title:
Buena Vista vein in Good Ore for the Isabella Mines Co.
Good ore is reported from the Buena Vista vein of the Isabella Mines Co. at a depth of 1200 ft. The vein is about 3 ft. wide and the ore has been opened to date for about 75 ft.
Above Info was Last Updated on 30.10.2020 (11:04:30)
Above Info was First Seen 23.02.2020
Type/Category of Info:
General Mining News
Info Source From:
The Mining and Scientific Press. Volume: 119 [CXIX], Issue No. 21Info Publication Date:
November 22, 1919Info found on page:
754Info Title:
Isabella Leasing Co. Workings
The Isabella Leasing company has the 15th level of the Lee or main shaft of the Isabella Mines company unwatered, and cross-cutting has started for the Buena Vista, Emma, Maloney, Orphan Belle, and other veins that have been ore producers in the past.
Above Info was Last Updated on 30.10.2020 (11:04:30)
Above Info was First Seen 10.03.2020
Type/Category of Info:
General Mining News
Info Source From:
The Mining and Scientific Press. Volume: 107 [CVII], Issue No. 7Info Publication Date:
August 16, 1913Info found on page:
280Info Title:
Isabella Shipped 1500 Tons in July
During July 58 cars, equal to 1500 tons, of ore was shipped from the Isabella mine. E. J. Fackerell, a lessee, is at present developing a new ore-shoot, opened by him on No. 4 vein. The drift driven north and south has already proved the shoot for the distance of 30 ft., and the ore broken fully 3½ ft. wide, as exposed in both headings, is worth from $40 to $80 per ton.
Above Info was Last Updated on 30.10.2020 (11:04:30)
Above Info was First Seen 24.10.2019
Type/Category of Info:
General Mining News
Info Source From:
Mining Science. Volume: 64 [LXIV], Issue No. 1663Info Publication Date:
December 14, 1911Info found on page:
ad43Info Title:
Isabella's Buena Vista Vein Will Be Developed
Following the disclosure of the rich strike in the Isabella holdings it was announced by J. R. Young, one of the directors of the company, that the old Buena Vista vein would be developed in the near future.
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Above Info was Last Updated on 16.06.2023 (09:34:57)
Above Info was First Seen 16.06.2023
Type/Category of Info:
General Mining News
Info Source From:
The Engineering and Mining Journal. Volume: 92 [XCII], Issue No. 12Info Publication Date:
September 16, 1911Info found on page:
564Info Title:
Isabella August Output
Isabella—This property on Bull hill is credited with an August output of 25 cars of ore.
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Above Info was Last Updated on 30.10.2020 (11:04:30)
Above Info was First Seen 26.03.2019
Type/Category of Info:
General Mining News
Info Source From:
The Engineering and Mining Journal. Volume: 90 [XC], Issue No. 23Info Publication Date:
December 3, 1910Info found on page:
1125Info Title:
Isabella Properties Still Works
Isabella—The leasers on this company's properties will this month have produced approximately 1500 tons of ore, estimated at a value of 1 oz. gold per ton.
A Seattle company has taken a three-years' lease on the mill and tailings dump.
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Above Info was Last Updated on 25.12.2021 (16:35:07)
Above Info was First Seen 26.03.2010
Type/Category of Info:
General Mining News
Info Source From:
The Engineering and Mining Journal. Volume: 90 [XC], Issue No. 12Info Publication Date:
September 17, 1910Info found on page:
575Info Title:
Isabella August Production
Isabella—The August production of the Isabella property was 1232 tons, of an average of about $25 per ton. It was produced entirely by lessees.
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Above Info was Last Updated on 24.12.2021 (08:35:00)
Above Info was First Seen 25.03.2010
Type/Category of Info:
Personals
Info Source From:
Mining Science. Volume: 62 [LXII], Issue No. 1592Info Publication Date:
August 4, 1910Info found on page:
111Info Title:
Mr. E. J. Fackerel is Hoisting Ore From Buena Vista Shaft
E. J. Fackerel, formerly superintendent for the Isabella Mines Co., is hoisting ore from his lease at the fourth level of the Buena Vista shaft.
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Above Info was Last Updated on 25.04.2023 (21:02:58)
Above Info was First Seen 25.04.2023
Type/Category of Info:
General Mining News
Info Source From:
The Mining World. Volume: 29 [XXIX], Issue No. 8Info Publication Date:
August 22, 1908Info found on page:
293Info Title:
Isabella Ships 1,200 Tons Smelting-Grade Ore Monthly
Cripple Creek—The Isabella is shipping 1,200 tons per month of smelting-grade ore and 100 tons of dump stuff is run through the mill daily.
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Above Info was Last Updated on 31.12.2023 (08:40:29)
Above Info was First Seen 31.12.2023
Type/Category of Info:
General Mining News
Info Source From:
The Mining World. Volume: 26 [XXVI], Issue No. 15Info Publication Date:
April 13, 1907Info found on page:
486Info Title:
Buena Vista Important Strike
Cripple Creek.—One of the most important strikes ever made in the Isabella property has occurred in the Buena Vista claim on Bull hill. The ore runs on an average of $100 per ton across 4 feet. There are many rich streaks that give high assays. The shoot has been proved up for about 60 ft. and the management believes it extends from the 9th to the 4th levels.
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Above Info was Last Updated on 17.11.2023 (14:54:52)
Above Info was First Seen 17.11.2023
Type/Category of Info:
General Mining News
Info Source From:
The Mining World. Volume: 26 [XXVI], Issue No. 14Info Publication Date:
April 6, 1907Info found on page:
455Info Title:
Buena Vista Strike Reported
Denver.—Another strike is reported in the Buena Vista claim of the Isabella on Bull hill. Assays from a 2½-ft. vein run as high as $217 per ton.
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Above Info was Last Updated on 16.11.2023 (17:59:07)
Above Info was First Seen 16.11.2023
Type/Category of Info:
General Mining News
Info Source From:
The Engineering and Mining Journal. Volume: 75 [LXXV], Issue No. 26Info Publication Date:
June 27, 1903Info found on page:
982Info Title:
Isabella Gold Mining Company Still Dormant
Isabella Gold Mining Company.—Although it has been repeatedly rumored that this property has been leased to a syndicate nothing of a reliable nature can be learned. The company is doing nothing, though a few lessees are at work.
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Above Info was Last Updated on 30.10.2020 (11:04:30)
Above Info was First Seen 29.04.2019
Type/Category of Info:
General Mining News
Info Source From:
The Engineering and Mining Journal. Volume: 75 [LXXV], Issue No. 16Info Publication Date:
April 18, 1903Info found on page:
610Info Title:
Isabella Gold Mining Company
Isabella Gold Mining Company.
This property has not started since being closed by the strike, and what will be done is not known. A number of rumors are heard.
Above Info was Last Updated on 30.10.2020 (11:04:30)
Above Info was First Seen 02.02.2019
Type/Category of Info:
General Mining News
Info Source From:
The Engineering and Mining Journal. Volume: 75 [LXXV], Issue No. 13Info Publication Date:
March 28, 1903Info found on page:
497Info Title:
Hoisting Plant at Buena Vista of the Isabella G.M. Co.
Isabella Gold Mining Company.
Babbit and Murphy, leasing on the Buena Vista claim, have installed a hoisting plant on the incline of the Buena Vista, and will use a skip. They have obtained an extension of their lease.
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Above Info was Last Updated on 30.10.2020 (11:04:30)
Above Info was First Seen 04.02.2019
Type/Category of Info:
General Mining News
Info Source From:
The Engineering and Mining Journal. Volume: 75 [LXXV], Issue No. 13Info Publication Date:
March 28, 1903Info found on page:
497Info Title:
Strike Shut Down the Isabella
Besides the Stratton's Independence the Isabella Gold Mining have shut down.
What ore is mined is stored and not shipped, owing to the labor troubles. There are about 718 men now idle in the district.
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Above Info was Last Updated on 30.10.2020 (11:04:30)
Above Info was First Seen 04.02.2019
Type/Category of Info:
General Mining News
Info Source From:
The Engineering and Mining Journal. Volume: 75 [LXXV], Issue No. 5Info Publication Date:
January 31, 1903Info found on page:
198Info Title:
Isabella Gold Mining Co. Annual Meeting Stuff
Isabella Gold Mining Company.—At the annual election of directors the following were named: E. W. Giddings, J. A, Connel, K. R. Babbit, G. M. Stone and J. A. Hayes. The meeting passed off very quietly, and the expected contest did not take place. The election was in every way a compromise, one representative being given to each of the factions.
The directors afterward chose officers as follows:
E. W. Giddings, president
J. A. Hayes, first vice-president
K. R. Babbit, second vice-president and general counsel
J. F. Sanger, secretary
and the Colorado Title and Trust Company, treasurer.
The general manager has not yet been selected, but it is understood that De La Vergne, the present manager will not be re-elected.
A good showing has been made on the property, though it has not paid expenses.
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Above Info was Last Updated on 30.10.2020 (11:04:30)
Above Info was First Seen 11.05.2019
Type/Category of Info:
General Mining News
Info Source From:
Mines and Minerals. Volume: 19 [XIX], Issue No. 8Info Publication Date:
March 1899Info found on page:
365Info Title:
Isabella Mine
Mines and Minerals, March 1899
(page 365)
Written for Mines and Minerals, by Prof. Arthur Lakes.
There is no doubt but a very rich strike of ore, perhaps the richest in the history of Cripple Creek, has lately been made in the Isabella mine at Cripple Creek. The exact nature and value of this at present are unascertainable, owing to the reticence of the company.
The nature of the ore appears to be very rich bodies of telluride and free gold, ores which, in a minor degree of richness, have characterized the mine from the outset.
The Isabella property is one of the oldest in the camp. It is situated on the Eastern slope of Bull hill, commanding a fine view of Pike's peak. A lofty castle rock of columnar phonolite crowns the hill above the mines, which was celebrated in the miners' strike as the "Strikers' fortress," commanding as it did a view of all the country round.
The rocks of this section are both andesitic breccia and phonolite. Most of the important mines on Bull hill are on veins in fissures in the massive eruptive rocks, a few such as the Victor, are on fissures in the breccia. The Bull Hill fissures are often faulted, owing to the brittle character of the massive rocks.
The veins are very numerous, trending in various directions. They vary from an inch to several feet in width, and show at times, well defined bodies of quartz in them, containing iron pyrites, iron oxide, fluorite, and other minerals forming the cement of the fragments of rock, occurring in the fissures. The country rock may also be impregnated with these minerals along the path of fissures.
The most well defined and continuous of these fissures or fissure systems are the veins of the Victor, Lee, and Isabella mines which are on the same, or closely allied veins, along the same zone of fissuring and ore deposition for a direct distance of upwards of a mile, and along these veins the mines are more or less in connection.
Two or more closely parallel veins are found in these mines, among which is the one in the Lee workings which has lately yielded such unprecedented riches. The course of the main vein fissures is often very circuitous and deflected. The country rock is partly massive trachy-phonolite and partly andesitic breccia. In the Lee shaft the vein is in the massive rock, in the Smuggler and Victor in the breccia.
The ore is in quartz, not unfrequently an opaline quartz like that deposited from a hotspring or geyser, showing the mode of genesis of the ore. This quartz may change into a yellow jasper. The precious metals are free gold, especially near the surface, and telluride ; the latter more with depth. The rich ore is in well defined shoots, continuing for considerable distance along the strike of the vein.
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Above Info was Last Updated on 30.10.2020 (11:04:30)
Above Info was First Seen 16.03.2019
Type/Category of Info:
Article
Info Source From:
The Mineral Industry, Its Statistics, Technology & Trade in the U.S. and Other Countries. Volume: 6 [VI]Info Publication Date:
September 1898Info found on page:
265Info Title:
Buena Vista Reached More Than 600 Feet During 1897
During 1897 the Buena Vista been opened to considerable depth of more than 600 ft., and with the increase in depth considerable water is being encountered, as was to be expected, although the upper levels were quite dry.
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Above Info was Last Updated on 02.05.2022 (20:22:44)
Above Info was First Seen 07.05.2010
Type/Category of Info:
Mine Info
Info Source From:
Colorado State Mining Directory 1898; Buyer's Guide to Representative Mining Machinery and Supply Houses of America. Info Publication Date:
1898Info found on page:
191Info Title:
Buena Vista Mine
Principal Producing Cripple Creek Mines - 1898:
Name: Buena Vista Mine (Bull Hill)
Owner: Isabella Gold Mining Co.
Capital:
President:
Vice-President:
Secretary:
Treasurer:
Superintendent: L. E. Smith
Manager: F. T. Freeland, Cripple Creek
Lessees:
Description: shaft; two 80-horse power horizontal tubular boilers; 8x10 double flat friction Fairbanks-Morse hoist; No. 7 Cameron pump.
Employes: 117 employes
Contact:
Notes:
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Above Info was Last Updated on 24.03.2024 (08:58:49)
Above Info was First Seen 09.04.2011
Type/Category of Info:
Article
Info Source From:
The Proceedings of the Colorado Scientific Society. Volume: 5 [V]Info Publication Date:
July 2, 1895Info found on page:
xxivInfo Title:
Colorado Scientific Society Members Visited
Members of the Colorado Scientific Society attending the 127th Regular Meeting held at the Masonic Hall in Cripple Creek July 1st, 1895, visited on the 2nd of July several mines and mills; Portland, Raven, Ruby, Lucky Guss, Zenobia, Pharmacist, Victor, Buena Vista, Londonderry, Climax, Deerhorn, Summit mines were visited, and also the Brodie and Hartzell Mills were inspected.
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Above Info was Last Updated on 19.01.2024 (18:46:22)
Above Info was First Seen 27.03.2011
Type/Category of Info:
General Mining News
Info Source From:
The Engineering and Mining Journal. Volume: 55 [LV], Issue No. 21Info Publication Date:
May 27, 1893Info found on page:
493Info Title:
Buena Vista Doing Well
Engineering and Mining Journal Report—The Buena Vista on Bull Hill is looking well and is being actively worked.
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Above Info was Last Updated on 05.04.2024 (13:32:15)
Above Info was First Seen 23.02.2012
Type/Category of Info:
General Mining News
Info Source From:
Daily Chronicle {Aspen]. Volume: 4 [IV], Issue No. 184Info Publication Date:
June 7, 1892Info found on page:
2Info Title:
Buena Vista Shipping
The Buena Vista still continue their regular shipments.
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Above Info was Last Updated on 09.10.2022 (09:44:43)
Above Info was First Seen 17.05.2010
Type/Category of Info:
Article
Info Source From:
The Herald Democrat. Volume: 13 [XIII]Info Publication Date:
March 19, 1892Info found on page:
2Info Title:
Buena Vista Ore Value
In terms of value of the ore, I had to take other people's statements for as I had no means of positively verifying. From statements made to me by different parties I have that the Buena Vista had $20 to $30 In Superficial Workings; with $300 in Average Assays; and $143 to $360 in Smelter or Mill Returns.
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Above Info was Last Updated on 15.01.2024 (16:49:57)
Above Info was First Seen 19.01.2011
Type/Category of Info:
Article
Info Source From:
The Herald Democrat. Volume: 13 [XIII]Info Publication Date:
March 18, 1892Info found on page:
2Info Title:
Buena Vista Info
From the Lou P. K. I went almost due east to Bull mountain, near the summit of which is located the Buena Vista, and near it, the Orphan Belle. The Buena Vista looked more like a mine than any other property in the district. It is managed also by an old Leadville miner, Mr. Tom McDonald, assisted by his brother as chief top man.
It is developed by a single incline, almost vertical, now down one hundred feet. The mine is provided with a substantial shaft house, and a Davis whim is used—the only bit of machinery to be seen in the entire district, costing the munificent sum of one hundred dollars.
A small boarding house is erected near by, but the company is building a larger one at the foot of the mountain, having wearied of the annoyance and expense of packing water up the steep elevation on the backs of burros.
The Buena Vista was located July 22, 1891, and has yielded profitable ore from the grass roots. Professor Newberry, of Aspen, made a very flattering report upon the Buena Vista, and the confidence felt in its development into a bonanza is evinced by the fact that the stock par value $1, has advanced to $8.50.
The first mineral taken out of the property ran $20 to $30 per ton, and the first car load, twenty-two tons seven hundred pounds, yielded $143 per ton at the Grant works in Denver. About three car loads have since been shipped, the values not made public.
The walls in the Buena Vista are conceded to grow firmer and the ore richer, as depth is attained. No drifting has been done, and we believe it is not the purpose of the management to do any stoping until the shaft is sunk to a greater depth.
The company has started a tunnel into the mountain, several hundred feet below, and the developments in this opening will be watched with great interest.
Admission to the mine is difficult to obtain, the owners being engaged in securing adjacent property.
In my third article on Cripple Creek I gave some analyses of the ore from the Buena Vista, secured by Mr. James Porter, a disinterested party.
It will require six months' work, I should say, to demonstrate satisfactorily the extent of the Buena Vista vein, and all of the characteristics of the Bull mountain formation.
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Above Info was Last Updated on 14.01.2024 (12:03:44)
Above Info was First Seen 14.01.2024
Type/Category of Info:
Article
Info Source From:
The Herald Democrat. Volume: 13 [XIII]Info Publication Date:
March 17, 1892Info found on page:
1-2Info Title:
Buena Vista Info
Dr. A. J. Lanterman, having resided in Leadville and at Buena Vista for the past fourteen years, and being everywhere, is recognized as a person of the highest integrity. Since November last, he has spent more than half of his time in the Cripple Creek district and is doubtless second to none in possession of information concerning its resources. He has watched the progress of events with painstaking interest from the beginning, and his simple relation of them constitutes a pretty succinct history of the camp.
"When I first came here, the only mine with any development whatever was the Great View, for it was not until December that work was begun upon the Buena Vista and Gold King, in the latter indications of mineral were observable almost at once, and within two weeks the first shipment was made.
The first car of ore from the Buena Vista did not go out until the first of February. In the discovery shaft of this mine, an eight inch pay streak was disclosed at a depth of thirty-five feet. At a depth of seventy-five feet the vein had widened to thirty-five inches.
The value of the ore, at thirty-five feet, was $34 per ton. The first shipment, consisting of twenty-two tons seven hundred pounds, ran $143 per ton, showing an increase in value as well as a widening of the pay streak. Since that time three cars of ore have been shipped. The value of its contents has not been made public, though I am satisfied, from information gathered from private sources, that it is of even better grade than the first lot.
"The Buena Vista exposed vein has walls of porphyry and is about five feet. I am not a geologist or a mineralogist, although engaged in mining for many years. I am not, therefore, bold enough to entertain a theory of the formation of this district. The generally accepted idea, however, is that the porphyry has been thrown out through the fissures in the granite, and the mineralized quartz has formed true fissures in the porphyry.
I know of but two true fissure veins which have granite walls. Upon these are located the Washington and the Blue Bell."
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Above Info was Last Updated on 13.01.2024 (16:09:03)
Above Info was First Seen 13.01.2024
Type/Category of Info:
Article
Info Source From:
The Herald Democrat. Volume: 13 [XIII]Info Publication Date:
March 16, 1892Info found on page:
1Info Title:
Buena Vista Info
Col. Ed F. Browne, of Aspen said that "contrary to the general opinion, I do not find that the porphyry is generally mineralized, or that there is a second deposition of porphyry in fissures; but the fact is, there are well defined leads of quarts that pass through this massive porphyry, and it is the gangue of the veins.
While there are parts of the porphyry rock that is mineralized, those parts that are rich at all are lying between stringers of the quarts, and it is easily seen how it should be mineralized, lying in such a position.
"East of the Great View is found the Buena Vista, which is on another vein that runs northwest, both of these lodes evidently pointing toward either Rhyolite or Mineral hill, northeast of the town of Fremont.
"The Buena Vista is a beautifully well defined lead in this porphyry, and undoubtedly of great value. As yet, not enough work is done on the extensions of this vein to fully determine its character. The Buena Vista is the deepest mine in the camp, and is a good example of the importance of deeper developments, as it shows a well defined fissure opening as it descends into the earth, and which, while at the surface was not much over a foot wide, is now fully four feet wide, and of much better ore.
"I am thoroughly of the opinion that there will be three great mines on the Buena Vista vein. I am also of the opinion that the greatest mine of this camp will be found in a locality not yet developed.
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Above Info was Last Updated on 12.01.2024 (15:15:40)
Above Info was First Seen 12.01.2024
Type/Category of Info:
Article
Info Source From:
The Herald Democrat. Volume: 13 [XIII]Info Publication Date:
March 16, 1892Info found on page:
2Info Title:
Buena Vista Ore Sample Values
Mr. James Porter, who spent many years in the Lake Superior district, had been in the camp for some time, representing eastern parties, and whereas he was not prepared to express positive convictions regarding the continuity of the veins now exposed, he remarked that the outlook was exceedingly encouraging, and the formation apparently worthy of the most thorough examination.
He showed several analyses of ore taken from different sections of the district, made at his instance. From a three ton lot in the ore house of the Buena Vista Mr. Porter took two samples. One of these, assayed by himself, ran $116; the other, sent to Capt. Evans, of Leadville, ran $94.
From seventeen inches of the face in the same mine, Mr. Porter took an average sample by scraping into a blanket, and secured a return of $72.
A sample of tellurium ran $31.50, while a sample of waste, taken from a wheel barrow loaded for the dump, ran $13.
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Above Info was Last Updated on 12.01.2024 (15:24:36)
Above Info was First Seen 12.01.2024
Type/Category of Info:
Article
Info Source From:
The Herald Democrat. Volume: 13 [XIII]Info Publication Date:
March 15, 1892Info found on page:
1-2Info Title:
Buena Vista Info
According to Col. H. W. Comstock, the surface ore covers a larger area, exists in larger bodies and carries a higher average value in gold than in any lode mining district yet explored in the Rocky Mountains. It has been demonstrated in the Gold King, Buena Vista, Great View, Superior and Rose-Maud, all of which are producing high grade shipping ore from solid masses measuring from four up to twenty-five feet across.
The greatest depth that has been attained is one hundred feet, in the Buena Vista. The ore body there, at that level, is larger, has firmer walls, and is of better grade than at any point above. There is no free milling ore, strictly speaking, in the district; but there is a vast tonnage, already uncovered and tested, that can be treated in the ordinary gold mills with little if any preliminary treatment.
This is, of course, surface ore, and as we approach water level we may, and shall, undoubtedly, find it necessary to roast most of the product in order to save a reasonable percentage of its value, as much of it is exceedingly complex in character. In the Buena Vista tellurium is found in all of the ore. The grade of these telluride ores is so high, exceeding $100 to the ton, that it will be a profitable shipping ore, notwithstanding its complex character and excess of silica.
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Above Info was Last Updated on 11.01.2024 (18:04:40)
Above Info was First Seen 19.01.2011