Arizona has primary lode gold deposits, some placer gold deposits and many copper deposits that yielded by-product gold and silver. Hidden gold deposits are likely in some known mining districts. Associated with some gold and copper deposits, are banded agates, agates, fire agates, and prismatic quartz crystals.
Tuesday, February 15, 2022
United Verde Mines, Jerome (Verde) district, Arizona
Gold Basin District, Arizona
The gold placers have erratically distributed gold. In addition to dry placer mining, there is considerable prospecting with metal detectors. Some find gold, while others have found a bonus of meteorite fragments.
Wednesday, November 3, 2021
Moss Gold mine, San Francisco District, Oatman, Arizona
Moss and Mossback mines, San Francisco (Oatman) district, Arizona showing locations of anomalies (yellow pins) and lineaments (red lines). Google Earth |
TECHNICAL REPORT
Technical Report, 2021 on the Mineral Resource, Mineral Reserve, and Mine Plan for the Moss Mine
Tuesday, August 25, 2020
Goldfield Arizona - A Good Tourist Town.
Gold was discovered in 1892, and led to construction of Goldfield boomtown. The town was occupied by more than 1,500 residents with a post office established on October 7, 1893. The rush was short-lived. By 1897, many mines lost their glitter, and miners packed up and left Goldfield to the ghosts.
But the ghosts were again haunted by miners and prospectors when a second community was established at the original townsite, and renamed Youngsberg. Mines re-opened, and a mill and cyanide plant built to recover gold, and a Post Office established on March 15, 1920, two years after the end of the first world war.
But the mines again lost their attraction and the town was vacated in 1926, leaving it in the hands of ghosts. Today, the town has been revived by tourist trade and the town stands once again with both the living and the dead. The tourist attraction, a replica of the old mining town, provides exhibits of old mines, a brothel, saloon, museum, livery, gift shops, galleries, gold panning and more. You can even take a mine tour and sometimes see a gunfight. It is a highly recommended stop when visiting the Phoenix east valley, whether you are sentient or ghost.
Goldfield is accessed from Route-88 (North Apache Trail). Along the way, you will drive by the Superstition Mountains Museum. This is a highly recommended stop with old stamp mills, and information on the Lost Dutchman mine. After your museum tour, Goldfield is just another 0.8-mile up the road on the left. The Goldfield 7.5-minute quadrangle encloses much of the district and shows locations of some mines and prospects.
Wilson and others (1967) report that the district is covered by a pediment surface overlying coarse-grained granite, granite breccia, granite pegmatite and indurated (hardened) arkosic conglomerate. The principal mines in the district lie along north-trending, (west-dipping) shear zones (faults).
The most productive mineralized zone at Goldfield was known as the ‘Mormon stope’ mostly mined out prior to 1898 at the Mammoth mine, north of the town. A stope was developed on an ore shoot, discovered north of the main Mammoth shaft at an intersection of a cross-fault with a shear zone, which provided permeability favorable for gold to flood the structure. The caved portion of the stope is 100-feet by 25-feet where granite is stained by limonite with irregular stringers of coarse-grained, white, quartz. Limonite (some gold-bearing) is likely derived from pyrite oxidation.
The district is best known for sporadic, fault-controlled, rich, ore shoots in large blocks of low-grade gold ore. During its heyday (1893 to 1898), the Mammoth, Bull Dog, and Black Queen mines produced about 60,000 ounces of gold and 20,000 ounces of silver. You can find out the value in present day's dollars by using links on Searching for Gold.
There are no known reports of placer gold in the district other than a passing statement by Dinsmore (1911) stating that within a 3 by 8 mile area, “gold may be panned anywhere”. A sediment-filled arroyo crosses the mineralized structure to the north and west of Goldfield, and likely has some gold. Based on some of the reported high-grade zones in the faults, it is likely a few nuggets and gold dust lie buried in sand and banks of the arroyo (search Google Earth for ‘Goldfield, AZ’). Like most stream beds in the desert, it is rare to see standing water in this drainage except after rare downpours. Since the drainage receives runoff from the nearby Goldfield Mountains, flash floods are not uncommon.
Gold was discovered in this area following a flash flood that exposed granite porphyry breccia containing visible gold. The granite was covered by arkosic conglomerate before it was exposed by the flood waters (arkose is a sedimentary rock with considerable quartz and feldspar and of similar composition as granite). Prospectors reported some very old mine workings were found in the area, indicating gold had been sought by unknown miners prior to 1892.
The principal mines are the Black Queen, Bulldog, Mammoth and the Old Wasp; however, other mines and prospects were dug including the Bluebird, Doc Palmer, Copper Crown, Tom Thumb, Fairstake, Treasure Vault, Golden Hillside, Highflyer, Lazy Doc, Goldstake and Gold Bond. These are described by Hausel (2020).
Sunday, May 17, 2020
ARIZONA Mines, Mills, Ghost Towns, Mining Museums & Tours
Ajo Historical Society Mine Museum in Ajo
Arcadia Ranch Museum in Oracle
Arizona Capitol Museum in Phoenix
Arizona Geological Survey, Tucson, Arizona
Arizona History Museum in Tucson
Arizona Museum of Natural History. in Mesa, Arizona
Arizona Public Lands - BLM
Arizona Science Center in Phoenix (sorry, we do not support those who require masks)
Audrey Headframe Park in Jerome
Bagdad Mining in Bagdad.
Bagdad mine overlook in Bagdad
Black Hills Rock Hounding near Safford
Bullion Plaza Cultural Center and Museum in Miami
Castle Domes Mines Museum in Yuma
Cave Creek Museum
Contention City Ghost Town near Tombstone
Copper Art Museum in Clarkdale
Desert Caballeros Western Museum in Wickenburg
Douglas Museum in Jerome
Fairbank Milling town near Tombstone
Fire Agates
Fire Agate Localities
Fire Agate Lapidary
Fire Agates at Deer Creek, Arizona
Fire Agates in Oatman Mining District, Arizona
Fire Agates RockHounding Area, Saddle Mountain, Arizona
Fire Agates at Slaughter Mountain, San Carlos Reservation, Arizona
Gemstones in Arizona, Gemland
Geology Tours, Gemland
Ghost Towns of Arizona
Gold King Mining Museum in Jerome
Gold Panning Area, Lynx Creek near Prescott
Goldfield Arizona Ghost Town near Apache Junction
Good Enough Mine Tour in Tombstone
Grand Canyon Tours
Greenlee Historical Museum in Clifton
Greenlee Rockhounding
Jerome Mine Museum
Kartchner Caverns in Benson
Millville Tour near Tombstone
Mineral Museum, University of Arizona, Tucson
Museum of Casa Grande
Old Dominion Mine Park in Globe Arizona
Planet Mine, Arizona and nearby ghost towns of the Swansea Mining district.
Queen Mine Tour in Bisbee
River of Time Museum in Fountain Hills
Rock Hounding Arizona
Rock Hounding on Public Land in Arizona
Rock Hounding Sites Gator Girl
Ruby Ghost Town south of Arivaca, Arizona
Superstition Mountain Lost Dutchman Museum in Apache Junction
Tombstone Arizona
Vulture Mine Tour near Wickenburg
World’s Smallest Museum in Superior
Rockhound and Prospecting Clubs
Apache Junction Rock Club
Arizona Association of Gold Prospectors (Phoenix)
Daisy Mountain Rock and Gem (phoenix)
Desert Gold Diggers (Tucson)
Gila County Gem & Mineral society (Miami)
Gold Prospectors Association of Tucson
Huachuca Mineral and Gem Club (Sierra Vista)
Huachuca Prospectors Association
Lake Havasu Gem & Mineral Society
Lake Havasu Gold Seekers
Mineralogical Society of Arizona (Phoenix)
Mohave County Gemstoners (Kingman)
Mohave Prospectors Association
Old Pueblo Lapidary Club (Tucson)
Prescott Gem and Mineral Club
Roadrunner Prospectors Club (Phoenix)
Sedona Gem & Mineral Club
Silvery Colorado River Rock Club (Bullhead City)
Sunsites Gem & Mineral Club (Pearce)
Superstition Mountain Treasure Hunters (Apache Junction)
Tucson Gem & Mineral Society
White Mountain Gem & Mineral Society (Show Low)
Wickenburg Gem & Mineral Society
Wednesday, December 18, 2019
Gold in Arizona - A Prospectors Guide
The 2019 book edition on Amazon |
Actually, I could only get a limited sampling on mines because there are so many. What I did was look at the many, many districts and focused on the important characteristics and some of the more impressive mines. So, if you visit those districts on Google Earth, or by using the AZ Top Maps App on this blogspot, you will be taken to some of the more interesting mines that are listed with GPS coordinates in the book, and provided with ideas on how are where to prospect in these districts.
Gold in an Arizona rhyolite |
In addition, there are relatively recently recognized gold deposits associated with what are known as detachment faults found over a giant region running from one side of Arizona to the other - and most of these are only partially explored with large regions remaining unexplored. And there are lots of the wet and dry gold placers. Yes, Arizona is known for copper, but it is also a significant source for gold.
Monday, May 27, 2013
The Vulture Gold Mine, Maricopa County, Arizona
A 20 stamp gold mill on display near Apache Junction, Arizona |
While talking to Shorty, he told me, he was the only successful prospector in the South Pass region over the past 60 to 70 years (I believe he was in his mid-80s at this time). It was apparently obvious I wasn't buying this, especially when I started looking around his tiny trailer thinking to myself - and why are you here? As if he could read my mind, he stood up and reached in one gopher hole and pulled out a ball jar full of gold (now I wish I would have carried a camera). Then went to another cubby hole and pulled out another, then another. Wow! Now he got my intention. But do you see what could have happened here? He claimed to have mined all of that gold, but didn't make up a lost legendary mine.
The rugged Superstition Mountains, home of the Lost Dutchman legend, are visible in the background. This rhyolite dome is the site where many people end up being found by Search and Rescue because of the rugged hills and intense desert heat. In foreground are the authors of the book 'GOLD'. |
One day, a gentleman walked into the Mercantile dressed to the 9s. He apparently just got off an airplane in Riverton and drove to Atlantic City. Barbara thought she had recognized an opportunity and sat down with this well-dressed gentleman to try to sell him a gold mine - that's right, she was offering him a great opportunity to purchase the Mary Ellen gold mine at a bargain. However, Barbara took another shot from the bar after the gentleman told her that he already owned the Mary Ellen mine. Barbara too passed away a few years ago. Not sure if anyone knew her age, but she had lived a long time and, for those of us who did not fall for her scams, we all miss her and her antics.
Superstition Mountains in the background from Goldfields, Arizona (photo by the author). |
The volcanic dome can be viewed on Google Earth: search for ‘Superstition Mountains, Arizona’. These rugged mountains are part of a 25 million year old, resurgent, rhyolitic dome and caldera. As you back out of Google Earth to an eye altitude of 30 to 35 miles, you should see evidence of an 8- to 10-mile diameter, circular structure: this is the dome. The dome is formed of rhyolite a volcanic rock that is the fine-grained equivalent of granite that occurs in a variety of colors, most notable light gray to white and reddish-brown to pink due volcanic rocks with abundant fine-grained pink feldspar.
Is there any truth to the Lost Dutchman legend? I’m no expert on the legend, but as myths go, they should be left to treasure hunters, used car salesmen, the Obama Administration, parapsychologists and brothels. The Lost Dutchman’s mine has never been found, but a rich quartz vein was discovered at the other end of the Phoenix valley in low-lying hills known as the Vulture Mountains. Records suggest the Vulture mine may have been the largest gold producer in Arizona in the historical past. And there may have been a connection between this and the Dutchman.
The Vulture mine became known for its high grade gold ore. Various reports suggest many thieves made a living high-grading ore from the mine (today, we call these people politicians). The problem was so rampant that some thieves were hanged at the mine site.
The Hanging Tree at Vulture City (photo by the author). |
Henry Wickenburg and others were prospecting along the Hassayampa River (a dry river much of the year) to the east of the mine when they spotted a dark, iron-stained outcrop on a hill to the west. On close examination, they found visible gold in the outcrop. All of the prospectors except Wickenburg, were apparently unimpressed as only Wickenburg decided to file a claim on the vein.
Part of the Vulture quartz vein showing gossan (iron-stained rock) (photo by the author). |
Johnson (1985) reports some of Wickenburg’s initial samples assayed 6 ounces per ton gold. But instead of mining, he decided to sell ore to local prospectors for $15 per ton. These miners hauled ore to the Hassayampa River where the rock was processed in many arrastras set up wherever water could be found in the intermittent drainage. In 1866, Wickenburg sold his vein to the Vulture Mining Company and the company constructed a 40-stamp mill near the present town site of Wickenburg and gold was recovered from high-grade ore that ran 1.2 to 4.5 ounces per ton.
Early mine development focused on the western portion of the vein. Since the only water to be found was 15 miles from the mine, the site of the mill was based on the presence of water. The high-grade ore had to be hauled by wagon to the mill and high-grading occurred in the mine, mill and on the haulage wagons.
View of the old head frame at the Vulture mine (right) and vein (left). |
When the mine reached the 240-foot level (240 feet deep), a rich pocket of gold was intersected where the vein swelled to 47 feet wide. This shoot produced ore that contained 7 to 12.5 ounces per ton gold, suggesting a possibility of supergene enrichment, something common in many Arizona districts. Supergene enrichment occurs when oxygen-rich meteoric water leaches metals from near surface and transports the metal down through fractures by gravity until fluids lose oxygen (typically at groundwater level) and precipitating valuable metals to produce a zone of enrichment.
Remains of the Vulture mine and city powerhouse. |
Nine years later (1888), the vein was again lost. The vein was cut by a fault known as the Talmadge Fault that sliced the vein on the 300-foot level and the vein had been down-dropped to an unknown depth. At this time, mining operations were very limited and restricted to the western portion of the vein above the fault zone and it wasn’t until 20 years later (1908) that a comprehensive geological study was conducted that led to the discovery of the vein offset. The mine reopened and ore was again processed to recover gold on amalgamation plates while tailings were stored for later cyanide treatment. A new mill was constructed in 1910 that had 20 stamps with a capacity of 100 to 120 tons per day. Water wells were also drilled. One intersected groundwater in a gravel lens beneath a lava flow at 400 feet depth. Another well was drilled to 1,000 feet before hitting water (Hutchinson, 1921).
The mine operated until 1917 when the vein was again lost. This time it had been offset along a second fault (Astor Fault) on the 950-foot-level in the eastern portion of the mine. The Astor fault cut the vein also displacing it somewhere down dip.
Exploration for the offset vein began with the sinking of a 500-foot winze (an underground shaft) sunk from the 1050-foot-level. The vein offset was discovered on the 1,550-foot mine level and operations continued until the mine was closed by the War Production Board in 1942. At this time in history, the War Production Board closed all non-essential gold mines in the US to ensure maximum energy was directed towards the war effort. Many mines that were closed by this order never reopened, suggesting at today’s gold prices, many of these likely have commercial ore.
Tightly folded Proterozoic basement gneiss exposed at the Vulture Mine. |
The vein was traced 1,000 feet on the surface and is 32 feet wide on the surface. It is a complex of quartz and schist, such that mineralized quartz (about 6 feet thick) lies adjacent to footwall schist. This is overlain by chlorite schist followed by a large 30 to 50 foot thick quartz vein that includes low-grade white quartz and quartz with brecciated schist. The hanging wall is composed of chlorite schist and granite porphyry while the footwall is sericite schist. The vein was quarried on the surface in two, small, gossan-stained small open pits (Hutchinson, 1921; Wayne, 1985).
Vulture Vein. Gold mineralization occurs within and adjacent to a north-dipping quartz porphyry dike that extends eastward from the granite pluton. Gold is concentrated in quartz veins and in silicified and altered rock within and adjacent to the dike. The precious metal occurs as native gold or electrum and is also associated with pyrite, galena and minor chalcopyrite and sphalerite. There is a positive correlation between gold and secondary silica and sulfides. Granitic breccia clasts become progressively more common to the west in the vein. Where the vein extends into the granite pluton, it splits into smaller veins prior to pinching out.
The geology suggests ore shoots occur en echelon in the vein Another undeveloped shoot is proposed to occur further east and at greater depth that those mined in the past. In the area overlying this proposed ore shoot; surface rock exposures include Miocene volcanic tuffs and lavas which cover the old schists and gneisses. The metamorphic rocks are again found 3,000 feet further east where they show some evidence of mineralization (Hutchinson, 1921). The faults which offset the Vulture vein are not exposed at the surface and are buried under gravel and lava.
Production. Production figures are incomplete. Available reports indicate the mine produced at least 340,000 ounces of gold and 260,000 ounces of silver from ore that had an overall average grade of 0.35 opt gold and 0.25 opt silver (Spencer and others, 1989; White, 1988).
Current Activities. In recent years, there was an effort by preservationists to push the State of Arizona into purchasing the Vulture mine and ghost town and withdraw the property from mining. Such activities tend to set a dangerous precedent in letting government nationalize private property and control private land and businesses. Such activities lead to corruption and mining companies avoiding some states and regions.
Purchasing a commercial ore body by the legislature with taxpayer funds stymied gold exploration throughout South Pass. Previously, the Willow Creek placer adjacent to the Carissa mine was taken by the State under the guise it contained abundant toxic chemicals. Now the preservation effort is spreading to the nearby Duncan gold mine.
Mine adit at the Vulture mine dug into fanglomerate. I could not find any reports of gold mined from this conglomerate or from nearby drainages, but it would be one place I would look for gold since it sits adjacent to the Vulture vein.
For now, Arizona’s Vulture mine appears to have weathered the effort to have the State of Arizona purchase private property and more recently, the property was optioned by a Canadian company: Source Gold Corporation.
A real 'LOST' gold mine. The Carissa gold mine sits on a major gold-rich shear zone that likely hosts several million ounces of gold. The mine was lost in a legislative takeover of public property. The Wyoming legislature purchased to gold mine and incorporated it into the South Pass City historical site so it could never be mined again. This purchase followed research by the author that showed a mineralized structure that is about 970 long by nearly 1,000 feet wide that likely continues to several thousand feet deep that contains gold. Drill intercepts to more than 900 feet intersected rich gold shear zones. |
References
Hausel, W.D., 2012, Arizona's Vulture Gold Mine and Lost Dutchman: ICMJ Prospecting and Mining Journal, v. 81, no. 9.
Hausel, W.D., 1991, Economic Geology of the South Pass Granite-Greenstone Belt, Wind River Mountains, Western Wyoming. Geological Survey of Wyoming Report of Investigations 44, 129 p.
Hausel, W.D., and Hausel, E.J., 2011, GOLD - Field Guide for Prospectors and Geologists. CreateSpace, 366 p.
Gold vault at the Vulture mine, Arizona. |
Hausel, W.D., 2019, Gold in Arizona - A Prospectors Guide: GemHunter publications, 350 p.
Hutchinson, W.S., 1921, The Vulture mine, Engineering and Mining Journal, v. 111, no.7 p. 2-12.
Johnson, Wayne, 1985, The Vulture: California Mining Journal, Oct., p. 8-11.
Spencer, J.D., Raynolds, S.J., Grubensky, M.J., Duncan, J.T., and White, D.C., 1989, Geology of the Vulture gold mine: Arizona Geological Survey, Arizona Geology, v. 19, no. 4, p. 1-4.
White, D., 1988, Geology of the Vulture Mine Arizona: AIME Preprint 88-44, 5 p.