Lord, I was born a ramblin' man,
Tryin' to make a livin' and doin' the best I can.
And when it's time for leavin',
I hope you'll understand,
That I was born a ramblin' man.
Allman Brothers Band
Tryin' to make a livin' and doin' the best I can.
And when it's time for leavin',
I hope you'll understand,
That I was born a ramblin' man.
Allman Brothers Band
I had the opportunity to leave my position in academe
10 years ago and did so hoping, like most “retirees,” that our financial
planning and frugality would yield financial rewards lasting throughout our
life. So far, so good! I was experiencing some good times at my institution
and wanted to leave on a high note---and because it was almost time for an accreditation
review. Few persons who have experienced
higher education would say they enjoyed reviews by the various accreditation
groups.
I also decided that although I was in late middle
age---maybe? Is 60 the new 40? There was a plethora of “things” that
interested me—from hiking 14ers and 13ers to reading to relaxing at morning
coffee to some low level consulting to fishing to camping to traveling to
etc. After about six months I discovered
that relaxing was getting boring and decided to try some new
projects---writing popular geology articles (like this Blog with an easy
editor), learning about new areas (like western US history), and trying to
better understand “minerals and rocks.”
I was not a stellar student in my college mineralogy and petrology
classes and perhaps wanted to redeem myself?
But traveling was always in the back of my mind as it had played a
major part of my life as a field geologist.
I was now free to hook up the travel trailer (no more hard ground and tents for me) and head out at about any
time of the year—I was born a ramblin’
man!
As noted in my previous post, in September 2016 we
were able to spend three weeks in the Black Hills of South Dakota---Road trip. Bring out the 60s CDs and turn up the radio:
Get your motor runnin'
Head out on the highway
Lookin' for adventure
And whatever comes our way
Head out on the highway
Lookin' for adventure
And whatever comes our way
Steppenwolf
Spearfish Peak, a Tertiary intrusion dominating the southeast skyline of Spearfish. |
The first part of my expedition was headquartered in
Spearfish, a quaint and progressive town in the northern Hills not far from the
rambunctious gambling community of Deadwood.
FS 195 road leads out of town and heads south along a really colorful
creek. It then meets Maitland Road
(gravel) and heads south to Lead and Central City---a sort of back road to
the mining communities. The conical Spearfish
Peak (a very large sill, I think, with almost laccolith qualities; Blog Posting
9-5-13) is the dominant feature on the west side of the road; however, another more
elongated peak becomes visible to the east---Tetro Rock at 5562 feet. Tetro,
like many other Tertiary intrusions in the northern Hills, is composed of an
igneous rock called phonolite: fine-grained groundmass of orthoclase
feldspar and aegirine with ~45% phenocrysts of large crystals of feldspar (~2
cm) and pyroxene (8 mm) crystals; tiny (1 mm) of nephaline and sodalite. The intrusive structure is probably a sill
intruded along bedding planes in the Ordovician-Cambrian Deadwood Formation (Lisenbee and others, 2013).
The large Tertiary intrusion known as Tetro Rock. Photo courtesy of Google Earth ©. The Red Valley (Spearfish Formation) and the community of Spearfish in background.
|
A few miles down the road from Tetro Rock are remains of mines in the
Maitland Mining District (Garden District) along False Bottom Creek. The earliest mining activity probably started in the
1880s; however, the major production of gold and silver commenced in 1902 with
the opening of the principal Maitland Mine.
In 1942 the Maitland was closed (due to the country’s effort in WWII)
but had produced at least 176,000 ounces of gold. The mineralization is a replacement gold
deposit in the quartzite and dolomite units of the Deadwood Formation (Cambrian-Ordovician) with mineralizing fluids
associated with nearby Tertiary intrusions.
Google Earth © photo of the Maitland Mining area. Maitland Road comes in from lower left. |
The above two photographs show remnants of structures associated with one of the Maitland mines. |
Igneous rhyolite of Tertiary age intruded into the sedimentary Cambrian-Ordovician Deadwood Formation. |
Manganese dendrite on a piece of the Deadwood Formation. Width FOV ~3.5 cm. |
Flow-banded rhyolite. Width FOV ~20 cm. |
A small wooden structure along False Bottom Creek that the property owner told me was an original building from the mining era. he also informed me that this area was the site of a stamp mill. |
Bioturbated (note structures appearing to be animal burrows) rock slab of Deadwood Formation. Penny for scale. |
There is a small cluster of homes in the Maitland
community along the creek (a gazillion other ranchettes are up in the hills)
and a side road, named either the Carbonate Road or the False Bottom Creek
Road, trends west to the old mining area of Carbonate Camp. The name comes from ore mineralization in the
middle Paleozoic Pahasapa Limestone rather than the Deadwood Formation.
In the Carbonate District,
the Pahasapa has been intruded extensively by Tertiary sills and dikes. Wimorat
and Patterson (1989) noted two different types of ore bodies: 1) fissure veins with
gold-bearing iron gouge in the center and lead-silver rich (galena, cerussite,
and cerargyrite) mineralized jasperoids (silica) along the margins; and 2) solution
cavity-filling ores that are usually closer to igneous intrusions, are less
siliceous than jasperoid, and are rich in lead and silver with minor gold.
The major minerals produced at Carbonate were silver,
lead and gold with the best production for less than 20 years from ~1880-1900
(peak years 1885-1991). The larger Iron
Hill Mine, in the southern part of the District, hung on until ~1930. In the late 1880s Carbonate Camp was a
booming town with numerous businesses, including banks, newspapers, stores,
mills, smelters, saloons, the largest hotel in Dakota Territory, and hundreds
of residents. By the early 1900s diphtheria, other illnesses, fires and falling
silver prices sounded the death knoll for the community.
It is hard to find production figures; however,
Shapiro and Gries (1970) stated that in the peak six years the various mines
produced 83 ounces of gold, 18,511
ounces of silver, and 83,191 pounds of lead.
Carbonate Camp was not a major gold producer.
Today the casual visitor might not even notice that a
thriving town once existed in the area.
Maybe casual is the wrong word since visitors most likely are aiming for
Carbonate Camp on ATVs or high clearance (preferably 4-wheel drive) vehicles. The road can be very rough and rocky and the
forest has reclaimed most of the old town.
I spotted some hewn logs, a few rotting log foundations, perhaps some
collapsed mine shafts (the ole knee prevented much hiking), but nothing
spectacular. To the south the Iron Hill
Mine (I think) looked reclaimed and No Trespassing signs were common. Nature has its way of taking back localities
of desecration and healing the land.
The forest has reclaimed much/most of Carbonate Camp although some structures may be identified as "human" in origin. |
The best known road leading out of Spearfish is US 14
alt. trending south along a Blue Ribbon trout stream, Spearfish Creek (Trivia
note: trout species are not native to
the Black Hills). The canyon itself is
absolutely gorgeous in all seasons, but especially so in the fall. The canyon and stream dissect a large plateau
of Mississippian Pahasapa Limestone; however, interrupting the plateau are
numerous small-to-large, Tertiary igneous intrusions. One intrusion that many visitors notice is
Ragged Top Peak/Mountain towering above the creek and reaching 6220 feet in
elevation while next door Elk Mountain comes in as 6422 feet. What most visitors do not realize is that in
the 1880s Ragged Top was the site of a booming mining community and several
small towns and settlements. The major mines were generally north of Ragged Top
but several other prospects were located west of the intrusion. The production, mostly gold with some silver,
came from vertical fractures in the limestone where mineralized fluid from the
nearby intrusions had left behind the metals.
As with many of these boom towns, major production lasted less than 20
years with final closing ~1915. It is
difficult to estimate production; however, Allsman (1940) noted production from
the mines operated by Spearfish Gold Mining and Deadwood Standard was nearly
50,000 ounces of gold from 1899-1914. In
mid-October 2016 spot gold prices ranged from ~$1250-1300 per ounce. That calculates out as over $62,500,000;
however, I have no information on the production costs. I do understand that
some operators are looking at the deposits at Ragged Top, and Carbonate, for
development of “heap leach” (cyanide) mining.
Google Earth © photo of Ragged Top Mountain along Spearfish Creek. |
Igneous rocks exposed on flanks of Ragged Top. Cloudy and misty morning and a telephoto lens do not allow for good photos. |
Lisenbee and others (2013) indicated that Ragged Top
is a sill and/or dike(s) intruded along bedding planes in the Deadwood
Formation. Someday I am going to try and
find out the “whys” of these Tertiary bodies and their intrusions into the
Deadwood Formation. For example, some of
the intrusions are not sills but actually laccoliths that domed up the
overlying Paleozoic rocks. Other
intrusions deposit minerals in the middle Paleozoic Pahasapa Limestone
Why? I did note that Paterson and others
(1989) believe isotopic compositions of minerals indicate “element sources in
[both] the Precambrian rocks and Tertiary intrusive rocks.” Some of life’s persistent questions?
The final stop in my little tour of old mining
communities in the northern Black Hills was at the community of Galena (I love
it when communities are named after minerals), south of Deadwood on US 385 for
a few miles, crossing Strawberry Hills and then turning east (for ~3 miles) on
FS 534 and then FS 534A. Galena is a
very active community with both permanent homes and seasonal “cabins.” In addition, the 1882 school house is well
preserved as are some other older buildings.
Unfortunately, it is difficult for a seasonal visitation by an ole
geologist to acquire permission to explore the mines!
In previous posting I wrote about how Custer’s 1874
expedition, along with his “discovery” of gold, created a mining rush in all
parts of the Black Hills. Although it
was illegal for non-Native Americans to enter the Hills, hundreds/?thousands of
prospectors tried. In 1875 Partick
Donegan and John Cochran “snuck” into the future Galena, found silver-rich
galena, and staked a claim. They were
then arrested and shipped away! By July
1876 the Merritt Brothers had entered “Galena,” staked a claim about 100 feet
above Bear Butte Creek, and started mining galena (probably argentiferous) and
silver. By fall 1876 the “sneakers” Cochran
and Donegan had returned to Galena and formally filed their Sitting Bull claim
about 200 feet above the Creek. But
remember all of the miners and prospectors were breaking the law as it was not
legal to settle in the Hills until February 1877. Who cares about decrees from Washington
D.C. when “gold” is available for the easy taking.
Restored miner's cabin at Galena. |
As with many gold/silver/lead prospects in the
northern Black Hills, the mineralizing fluids are associated with the Tertiary
intrusives---with metal formation in the bedding planes, cracks, crevices and
vugs of the Deadwood Formation. The
intrusives at Galena are composed of numerous sills and dikes that contain a
wide variety of rocks with a fine-grained groundmass sprinkled with feldspar
phenocrysts.
There were two major “pay zones” of horizontal
argentiferous galena producing at Galena: 1) the Lower Contact about 100 feet above Bear Butte Creek (the Merritt
brothers’ claim) and 2) the Upper Contact
about 400 feet above the Creek (Cochran and Donegan’s Sitting Bull
property).
By the early 1880s Galena had numerous hotels, stores,
a smelter or two, several mines, boarding houses, stamp mills, ore roasting ovens,
saloons, newspapers, physicians, barber shops, a telephone line; with rail service arriving in 1902. The place was booming. However,
as with many boom towns of that era production begin to decline---too many corporate
fights and law suits, the 1893 drop in silver prices, production costs, price
of equipment, etc. The “good times” periodically returned to Galena but never
remained for a long period of time.
The original Galena District along Bear Butte Creek produced
mostly silver and lead although the ore minerals varied. For example, the Sitting Bull properties yielded
much silver from oxidized minerals in the Upper
Contact zone while the Double Rainbow immediately below on the Lower Contact yielded silver from
primary sulfides.
In addition to the Bear Butte mines (silver and lead)
producing from zones in the Deadwood Formation, other properties in the
District (i.e. Gilt Edge) produced gold from brecciated rocks and fracture zones in Tertiary trachyte and quartz
trachyte porphyry. Add those two gold
occurrences to the Homestake mine producing from Precambrian rocks, and Carbonate
and Ragged Top producing from the Pahasapa Limestone, the Tertiary intrusions
and their associated fluids are responsible for the major occurrences of gold,
silver and lead in the northern Black Hills.
And that leads me back to George Armstrong Custer and
his 1874 Expedition to the Hills. I
noted in the previous Posting that an African American woman by the name of Sarah
Campbell, but usually known as “Aunt Sally”, was part of the Expedition and an
original claimant on the French Creek gold claims. I also stated that she was one of the few
members of the Expedition to return to the Black Hills. In fact, she settled in Galena and is buried
in the town’s Vinegar Hill Cemetery.
Road trips for field geologists or biologists
almost are always enjoyable. There are
so many rocks to see, birds to identify, streams to fish, trails to hike, and
memories of more youthful days to recount.
Photo courtesy of Chuck James via www.dhsclassmates.com |
On
the road again -
Just can't wait to get on the road again.
The life I love is [hiking] with my friends
And I can't wait to get on the road again.
On the road again
Goin' places that I've never been.
Seein' things that I may never see again
And I can't wait to get on the road again.
On the road again –
Just can't wait to get on the road again.
The life I love is [hiking] with my friends
And I can't wait to get on the road again.
On the road again
Goin' places that I've never been.
Seein' things that I may never see again
And I can't wait to get on the road again.
On the road again –
Willie
Nelson
REFERENCES CITED
REFERENCES CITED
Allsman, P.T., 1940,
Reconnaissance of gold-mining districts in the Black Hills, S. Dak.: US
Geological Survey Bulletin 427.
Cole, B. and A.
Smailbergovic, 2013, Technical Report on the Blind Gold Project, Maitland Mining
District, Lawrence County, South Dakota: Dakota Territory Resource Corporation,
Reno, Nevada.
Lisenbee, A.L., J.A.
Redden, M.D. Fahrenbach, and K.A. McCormick, 2013, Geologic Map of the Savoy Quadrangle,
South Dakota: South Dakota Geological Survey 7.5 Minute Series Geologic
Quadrangle Map 20.
Lisenbee, A.L., J.A.
Redden, and M.D. Fahrenbach, 2013, Geologic Map of the Spearfish Quadrangle,
South Dakota: South Dakota Geological Survey 7.5 Minute Series Geologic
Quadrangle Map 21.
Paterson, C.J., A.L.
Lisenbee, and J.A. Redden, 1989, Gold deposits in the Black Hills, South Dakota in Paterson, C.J. and A.L. Lisenbee, Metallogeny
of gold in the Black Hills, South Dakota (T.B. Thompson, Ed.): Society of Economic
Geologists Guidebook Series Volume 7.
Shapiro,
L.H., and J.P. Gries, 1970, Ore deposits in rocks of Paleozoic and Tertiary age
of the northern Black Hills, South Dakota: US Geological Survey Open-File
Report 70-300.
Wimorat, M. and C.J.
Paterson, 2007, Carbonate-hosted Au-Ag-Pb deposits, northern Black Hills in Paterson, C.J. and A.L. Lisenbee, Metallogeny
of gold in the Black Hills, South Dakota (T.B. Thompson, Ed.): Society of
Economic Geologists Guidebook Series Volume 7.
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