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Osceola Ditch
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Flume timbers
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Looking toward Utah...
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Mining, mining facilities, equipment, mine tailings and other relics in underground mining as well as in- **Bergbau, bergbauliche Anlagen, Ausrüstungen und Abraumhalden bzw. andere Hinterlassenschaften im Untertagbau wie auch im Tagebau
Mining, mining facilities, equipment, mine tailings and other relics in underground mining as well as in- **Bergbau, bergbauliche Anlagen, Ausrüstungen und Abraumhalden bzw. andere Hinterlassenschaften im Untertagbau wie auch im Tagebau
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Osceola Ditch


A common problem in 19th century mining in the arid and semiarid US West was finding adequate water and fuel for processing, in the absence of modern transportation and pumping technology. This motivated the construction of some extraordinary diversion projects, which now seem out of all proportion to the potential payoff. Here's another example, in eastern Nevada, now largely in Great Basin National Park. An 18-mile ditch & flume was constructed in 1889-90 to bring water from Lehman Creek to the placer deposits in the Osceola District. Altho some gold was recovered, the project never paid off, and was defunct by 1901.
The left insert shows another view; the right shows broken timbers that used to form the edge of the water-carrying channel. In many places the "ditch" was partly a flume--that is, a channel built up with walls on either side.
The left insert shows another view; the right shows broken timbers that used to form the edge of the water-carrying channel. In many places the "ditch" was partly a flume--that is, a channel built up with walls on either side.
William Sutherland has particularly liked this photo
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