RI 4719 Investigation Of Mercury Deposits, Cinnabar Creek Area, Georgetown And Akiak Districts, Kuskokwim Region, Southwestern Alaska

- Organization:
- The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
- Pages:
- 20
- File Size:
- 805 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1950
Abstract
Mercury deposits were discovered in 1941 in the sedimentary rocks of the Cinnabar Crook area, near the head of the Holitna River drainage in southwestern Alaska, by Russell Schaefer and Harvey Wincholl of Sloitmut, Alaska. High-grade float was found in both Canary Gulch and Cinnabar Gulch, and indications of other deposits wore found in Aldor and Broken Shovel Gulches. Schaefer and Winchell's exploration in 1942 and 1943 revealed placer deposits of cinnabar along Canary Gulch. During prospecting on Canary Gulch, 3,600 pounds of ore was recovered from the detrital material on the Lucky Day lode at the head of the gulch. When retorted, this ore was reported by the owners to have produced 26 flacks of quicksilver. During the summer of 1943, Wallace M. Cady and Charles A. Hickcox, of the U. S. Geological Survey, spent 4 weeks mapping and investigating the area. Bruce I. Thomas and Harold C. Pierce, mining engineers of the Bureau of Mines, examined and sampled several deposits in September 1943. Following their preliminary examination, in view of the exceptionally high-grade cinnabar present, additional investigation by the Bureau of Mines was recommended. A program of trenching, test pitting, and sampling to delimit the deposits was completed during the summer of 1947 under the direction of the author.
Citation
APA:
(1950) RI 4719 Investigation Of Mercury Deposits, Cinnabar Creek Area, Georgetown And Akiak Districts, Kuskokwim Region, Southwestern AlaskaMLA: RI 4719 Investigation Of Mercury Deposits, Cinnabar Creek Area, Georgetown And Akiak Districts, Kuskokwim Region, Southwestern Alaska. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1950.