slgwv's photos with the keyword: Hanging Flume
San Miguel River
21 Sep 2016 |
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Colorado. Just upstream from its confluence with the Dolores. Some of the supports for the Hanging Flume (https://www.test.ipernity.com/doc/289859/album/821186) are visible on the cliff at the left. The shrub in the foreground with small yellow blossoms is (a-CHOO!) rabbitbrush.
The Hanging Flume
25 Aug 2015 |
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Colorado, USA. Detail of some of the surviving timber supports. I assume that some poor soul dug the mounting holes into the sandstone by hand, with a single-jack and star bit, while hanging from a bosun's chair or something similar! Colorado, USA. For detailed description and background on the flume see adjacent photo or the album.
The Hanging Flume, rebuilt
25 Aug 2015 |
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Colorado, USA. Showing the little section rebuilt in 2012 in context. The river in the foreground is the San Miguel. For detailed description and background see adjacent photo or the album.
The Hanging Flume, rebuilt
25 Aug 2015 |
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Colorado, USA. For detailed description and background see enclosing photo or the album. This 48-foot section was rebuilt in 2012 as a "living archeology" study, and gives a sense of what the original looked like when in operation.
The Hanging Flume
25 Aug 2015 |
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Close-up down by the Dolores River. For detailed description and background see the caption on the adjacent photo or the album.
The Hanging Flume
25 Aug 2015 |
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Southwestern Colorado, USA. Telephoto view from an overlook & interpretive site off State Route 141. An extraordinary project, built from 1888-1891, to bring water from the San Miguel River to perched placer deposits on benches above the Dolores River. Much of the last 5 miles or so of the flume is built into the canyon wall itself, as here, with timber supports inserted directly into the cliff face, sometimes a hundred feet in the air. (There's no mention of workplace injuries and fatalities during construction.) And after all that, the placer deposit was uneconomic--the gold was too fine and washed on thru. The company was defunct by the mid 1890s. In the last couple of decades, the flume has been the object of archeological study and is protected as a historic site.
And, of course, a generation later they wouldn't have bothered with a flume, because water could have been pumped up directly from the river with gasoline engines. A little activity along that line seems to be happening today, based on some operations I saw on a hike down to the Dolores.
The left insert shows a detail of the insertion of some of the supporting timbers into the sandstone; the right shows a short section that was rebuilt in 2012 as part of a "living archeology" study. A number of other views are also in the album.
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