IC 6960 Sampling And Testing Of A Gold-Scheelite Placer Deposit In The Mojave Desert, Kern And San Bernardino Counties, Calif. ? Introduction

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
H. W. C. Prommel
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
28
File Size:
10295 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1937

Abstract

The increase in the price of gold in 1933 was the cause of starting many activities in gold prospecting and mining; it led to investigations of many of the so-called desert placers in the Southwest, which heretofore had not been deemed of commercial importance. Among these, attention was called to some of the gravel beds in the vicinity of the Randsburg-Atolia mining districts of Kern and San Bernardino Counties, Calif., in which gold and scheelite, (calcium tungstate, CaW04) were said to be present. Following a partial sampling and testing of the gravel, large-scale operations were begun in 1935. During the same year more detailed sampling and testing of the gravel beds were done by the author. During 147 days, 1,239 test holes 28 inches in diameter were drilled; their total depth amounted to 16,705 feet. These test holes furnished 2,495 samples of an average volume of 1.0583 cubic yards bank run each; all of the material was run through a sample mill constructed on the property. Original and rather unusual sampling and testing methods had to be used; milling and mining methods for large-scale operations also offered difficulties. The primary purpose of this drilling and sampling campaign was to determine, over a large area, the amounts of gold and scheelite recovered by placer methods such as were already in use on the property. This paper describes sampling and testing methods employed by the author during the 1935 drilling campaign. LOCATION The gold and scheelite placer deposit is in the Atolia tungsten mining district about one-half mile west of the small mining town of Atolia and about 5 miles south of Randsburg in the Randsburg gold-mining district. The deposit lies near the foot of the Rand Hills, in the Mojave desert. The territory is served by hard-surfaced roads from the north and south; Los Angeles is 150 miles to the southwest. A branch of the Southern Pacific Railroad passes within 5 miles of Randsburg.
Citation

APA: H. W. C. Prommel  (1937)  IC 6960 Sampling And Testing Of A Gold-Scheelite Placer Deposit In The Mojave Desert, Kern And San Bernardino Counties, Calif. ? Introduction

MLA: H. W. C. Prommel IC 6960 Sampling And Testing Of A Gold-Scheelite Placer Deposit In The Mojave Desert, Kern And San Bernardino Counties, Calif. ? Introduction. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1937.

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