Mining At Aspen

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Bruce Bryant
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
132
File Size:
10505 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1982

Abstract

Silver ore was discovered at Aspen in 1879, but the district did not reach full production until 1888 after lawsuits were settled and railroads furnished less expensive transportation to the outside world. The boom years were 1888-92; production declined thereafter. From the middle 1920's until 1950, the Midnight mine in the Richmond Hill district furnished most of the output in the Aspen quadrangle. Since 1950, little mining has been done at Aspen. The metals produced were silver, lead and zinc. Native silver dissolved from the sulfide ores was redeposited by waters circulating as deep as 300 m below the land surface, resulting in great secondary enrichment of many of the deposits. Over 100 million ounces of silver were produced in the Aspen quadrangle. Low-grade lead-zinc deposits remain between the old workings locally, and data available suggest that primary ore below levels mined is also of low grade. The ore occurs in the Mississippian Leadville Limestone and the lower part of the Pennsylvanian Belden Formation in sites that were made favorable for deposition by a number of stratigraphic and structural factors.
Citation

APA: Bruce Bryant  (1982)  Mining At Aspen

MLA: Bruce Bryant Mining At Aspen. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1982.

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