Gold Dredging In California And Methods Devised To Increase Recovery (9d8641e3-1793-4658-85e5-e92e0a6f09e0)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
E. S. Leaver J. A. Woolf
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
19
File Size:
944 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1937

Abstract

THE purpose of this paper is to describe, in a general way, gold-dredging operations in California, with particular reference to unusual features, including types of deposits and recent attempts to improve the recovery of the gold. Dredging Areas The gold-bearing formations that traversed the western slope of the Sierra Nevadas for a north and south distance of some 300 miles furnished the immediate source of the gold found in most of the placer deposits of California. Erosion through a long period carried the gold, together with various forms of partly disintegrated material, to lower elevations and formed placer deposits. Through the classifying action of water in motion, the coarser gold and heavier material of various kinds were - deposited relatively near the source; consequently, in the higher mountain country, old river channels were worked feverishly during the early California gold-rush days because of their high gold content. With the working out of these known high-grade channels, and from the knowledge thus obtained of prehistoric stream beds, drift mining was started and flourished until about 1890. Even today many drift mines are operating with the objective of opening other old Tertiary river channels that have been covered by volcanic flows. Adjacent to these areas, which contained relatively high gold values in the older river channels, smaller particles of gold, gravel, and debris were deposited along the sides of the former stream beds and on the adjoining flat areas, thus forming the large placer deposits, which were worked principally by hydraulic mining. Following the course of the ancient rivers and of the present drainage system to the lower edge of the foothill country, extensive areas of alluvial
Citation

APA: E. S. Leaver J. A. Woolf  (1937)  Gold Dredging In California And Methods Devised To Increase Recovery (9d8641e3-1793-4658-85e5-e92e0a6f09e0)

MLA: E. S. Leaver J. A. Woolf Gold Dredging In California And Methods Devised To Increase Recovery (9d8641e3-1793-4658-85e5-e92e0a6f09e0). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1937.

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