slgwv's photos with the keyword: ore
Don't let your mind wander--
18 Mar 2017 |
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Not a place to meet the F-250 coming the other way! Red Canyon mining district, above (yes!) Red Canyon in the Pine Nut Mountains, Douglas County, Nevada. Looking south. The district was worked for gold and silver beginning in the 1860s, and there has evidently been more recent activity, probably associated with the run-ups in precious metal prices ca. 1980 and since 2000.
Arrastra close-up
05 Oct 2016 |
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Showing the hole in the central stone where the vertical axle goes, the flagstone patio where the ore was crushed, and the surrounding stone curb.
IMG 7741
05 Oct 2016 |
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Arrastra
05 Oct 2016 |
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Preserved arrastra (not a mock-up!) off the trail to Winnemucca Lake, near Carson Pass, California. This was an early ore-crushing device. A pole in the center of the circular patio acted as a vertical axle. It supported one or more crosspieces to which heavy stones were attached by chains. Draft animals hitched to the crosspieces would rotate them around the axle, dragging the stones across the patio on which the ore had been spread. The name comes from Spanish arrastrar , to drag, and the device was introduced by early Mexican miners. Altho crude, an arrastra could be made quickly from local materials, aside from the chains, and so was very practical for the conditions. The insets show an interpretive sign and a close-up of the center stone where the axle was attached. Map location is approximate.
Arrastra
20 Nov 2014 |
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Early ore-crushing device. Draft animals (oxen, mules, whatever) were hitched to one or more of the cross-pieces, and as they walked in a circle around the middle pivot, the large boulders hanging off the chains would be dragged over the rock-lined patio underneath where the chunks of ore had been dumped. Not very sophisticated, or effective, but it was cheap and could (aside from the chains) be made of local materials. The name comes from Spanish arrastrar , to drag. This is a model at the Jerome mining museum, Arizona.
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