Reclamation Practices at Homestake’s McLaughlin Mine

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Raymond E. Krauss
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
3
File Size:
405 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1990

Abstract

The McLaughlin Mine is based on a world class epithermal gold deposit located in the coastal thrust fault of northern California, about 1 12 air km (70 air miles) north of San Francisco. Owned and operated by Homestake Mining Co., the McLaughlin deposit contains about 18 Mt (20 million st) of gold ore at an average grade of 5.2 g/t (0.152 oz per st), or about 93 t (3 million oz). The area was identified as a gold target by Homestake in early 1978. Drilling confirmed it to be a commercial deposit by 1980. The mine was then planned, engineered, built and brought into production by March of 1985. The deposit was historically a part of the Knoxville District. It was mined for cinnabar, which was used to produce mercury for use in recovering gold and silver in the Mother Lode and Comstock districts. At that time, the mine was called the Manhatten and later the One Shot Mine. It was worked for more than 100 years, producing about 76,000 flasks of mercury without any awareness of the presence of economic concentrations of gold. By 1978, the site was largely disturbed and entirely unreclaimed.
Citation

APA: Raymond E. Krauss  (1990)  Reclamation Practices at Homestake’s McLaughlin Mine

MLA: Raymond E. Krauss Reclamation Practices at Homestake’s McLaughlin Mine. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1990.

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