SANTA CATALINA MOUNTAINS LOOKING EAST FROM STATE PARK. BOUNDING PIRATE FAULT RUNS THROUGH AREA IN FOREGROUND. |
The Santa Catalina Mountains dominate the skyline east of Tucson and are a typical Basin
and Range chain with large bounding normal faults on either side. West of
the Catalinas (along the highway) is the Canada del Oro Basin, a graben filled
with several thousand feet of sediments eroded off the high mountains.
The coalescing alluvial fans (debris shed off the retreating mountains) from
the Catalinas seemed to have merged with similar fans coming off the Tortolita
Mountains (west of the Basin) about one Ma (Bezy, 2002) (Fig. 6). Most of
the sediment in the Basin is composed of pieces of granite, schist and their
mineral components such as feldspar, quartz and muscovite. This seems
logical since the western mountain front is composed dominantly of different
types of granite emplaced during the Precambrian (Oracle Granite, 1.45 Ga) and
the Tertiary (Wilderness Suite Granite, 45-50 Ma; Catalina Granite, 26 Ma)
(Bezy, 2002) (Fig. 7).
The major drainage along the western
front of the range is the south-flowing Canada del Oro with tributaries coming
down from the mountains and joining it at right angles. Most likely this
rather straight-flowing stream follows the course of the western bounding fault
termed the Pirate Fault. Mt. Lemon at 9157 feet is the highest
point in the Catalinas and has a ski resort---not a very good proposition in
most dry winters. The name, Santa Catalina, may have been bestowed by a Jesuit
priest, Eusebio Francisco Kino, who was busy converting the Tohono O’odham
(local Native Americans) to Catholicism in the late 1600’s. As with many
places in the west, Spanish miners soon followed in the footsteps of the
proselytizing priests. They evidently found placer gold in a creek and
named it Canada del Oro or Gulch of Gold, a name that has intrigued me for the
several years that I have been coming to Tucson.
The area also has its share of lost
mine stories, although nothing to quite match the Lost Dutchman up at Apache
Junction. Most of the tales seem concerned with the Iron Door Mine (gold)
and La Esmeralda (silver) in the northern section of the Catalinas. Clay
Thompson of the Arizona Republic in
the 10 December 2007 edition reported: “at some point in the 1750s or 1760s
Jesuit missionaries feared for their lives, either because of a revolt by their
Native American charges or because of attacks by the implacable Apaches. So they stashed a whole bunch of silver and
gold in either a mine or a cave somewhere in the mountains north of Tucson and
sealed it with a heavy iron door - minas de fierro con puerta en la Canada
del Oro. Then the Jesuits lit out for friendlier environs, and over time
the exact location of the treasure was lost.
Lots of people have searched for it over the years, but obviously, no one has ever found it, if, indeed, it is there to be found. One of the people who believed in the legend was Buffalo Bill Cody, who owned some mines in the area at one time and looked around a bit for the Mine With the Iron Door.
In 1923, a popular storyteller named Harold Bell Wright cranked out The Mine With the Iron Door, a novel featuring brave and honest prospectors, a plucky orphan girl, a wrongly accused hero and a couple of villains named Sonora Jack and Lizard. The novel was made into a movie of the same name in 1924 and again in 1936.”
Lots of people have searched for it over the years, but obviously, no one has ever found it, if, indeed, it is there to be found. One of the people who believed in the legend was Buffalo Bill Cody, who owned some mines in the area at one time and looked around a bit for the Mine With the Iron Door.
In 1923, a popular storyteller named Harold Bell Wright cranked out The Mine With the Iron Door, a novel featuring brave and honest prospectors, a plucky orphan girl, a wrongly accused hero and a couple of villains named Sonora Jack and Lizard. The novel was made into a movie of the same name in 1924 and again in 1936.”
There is at least one region, the
Southern Belle District but sometimes referred to as the Catalina or Oracle
District, that actually has produced both lode and placer gold. The mine, “a former surface and underground
Au-Pb-Ag-Cu-W-silica mine”,
evidently was closed in 1964. “Mineralization
is a tabular ore body” hosted in rocks of the Precambrian Apache Group (exposed
between the Oracle Granite and the Catalina Granite). Mineralization in the quartz veins “is
probably associated with a Lower Cretaceous-Tertiary intrusive period” (www.mindat.com).
I
have thus far been unable to gain access to the Southern Belle property, so I
did the next best thing—grabbed my gold pan and
tried to locate a placer deposit in Canada del Oro. I did find a single
small piece of flour gold but not much else. Toole (2007) suggested that
since the stream course contained 60-200 feet (actually I think it is much
greater) of “overburden” then the gold would be down on the bedrock. But he also opined that perhaps a metal
detector (which I do not own) could locate surficial nuggets.
My lack of success with the pan is
probably the norm for Canada del Oro. It
appears that for several years after members of the local Native Americans quit
discouraging exploration, miners tried to make a living with placers but
activity seemed unsustainable over the long term. Wilson (1933) reported “numerous old pits,
trenches, and tunnels indicate considerable early placer mining, and many
thousand dollars worth of gold are reported to have been recovered. The production recorded from 1903 to 1924,
inclusive, amounted to $11,351 [this was at $20 gold] …During the 1932-1933
season, approximately thirty men intermittently carried on small scale rocking
and panning in the Canada del Oro region, chiefly on the northern side of the
creek. Although one $25 nugget [1.25 oz]
and a few $5 nuggets [.25 oz.] were reported, the average daily returns per man
were seldom more than fifty cents”.
REFERENCES CITED
Bezy, J. V., 2002, A Guide to the Geology of
Catalina State Park: Arizona Geological Survey, Down-to-Earth 12.
Toole, D., 2007, Where to Find Arizona’s Placer
Gold: Delos Toole Gold Books, Salem, Oregon.
CANADA DEL ORO BASIN IN MIDDLE DISTANCE. LOOKING WEST FROM CATALINA MOUNTAINS WITH TORTOLINA MOUNTAINS IN FAR DISTANCE. |
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