Tuckerville, CO part 3

By webmaster at 1:11 pm on February 20, 2009 | No comments

Samples collected during this period contained a suite of minerals that included species not described before from Colorado.  Later work by the Bendix Corp, under contract to the Atomic Energy Commission, expanded the list of species found there and included one new species. The new mineral, theisite, is an orthorhombic Cu-Zn(As,Sb) arsenate described as sectile, bluish-green scales to 2mm. This species has since been recognized from a locality in Utah and from a number of localities in Europe. A partial listing of additional species includes:

adamite, austinite, azurite, chalcocite, chonichalcite, covellite, cuprite, digenite kolwezite, malachite, parnauite, partzite, pyrite, tetrahedrite, theisite, uraninite, zeunerite.

Tucker's Tunnel specimen w/azurite & theisite 7.5X6 cm

Detail, Azurite crystals, FOV 2.5 cm
Detail, theisite and azurite, FOV 1.5 cm

This unusual suite of elements and minerals have similarities to uranium vein deposits with complex paragenesis in the Co-Ni arsenide group. These could include nearby deposits in Precambrian rocks as well as  uranium bearing, silver, base metal vein deposits in Europe. The deposit at Tucker’s Tunnel contains significant amounts of As, Cd, Sb, Mo, Ni, Co and Ag as well as large concentrations of Cu, Pb and Zn. A uranium-copper-cobalt-silver-arsenic vein in Precambrian rocks at Elk Park, south of Silverton and a uranium vein deposit high in the Needle Mountains northwest of the Tucker’s Tunnel occurrence are of similar interest.

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Tuckervill, CO part 2

By webmaster at 10:44 pm on February 17, 2009 | No comments

Like many of the lessor mineralized areas in the San Juan Mountains, these prospects were first discovered and tested in the latter part of the 1800’s and in the early 1900’s. First recorded production is in 1913 and included some 57 tons of ore with 12 ounces of gold, 237 ounces of silver, 2,900 pounds of copper and 1,700 pounds of lead.

In the mid-1950’s, Mr. Reno Montonati, a local prospector interested in the silver in the area, discovered radioactivity at Tuckers Tunnel, did some development/exploration work and promoted the prospects for uranium. An engineer, he actually built his own helicopter and flew it in the area!

J.L. Moore on Tucker's Tunnel dumps

Mary Murphy Mine, Needle Mtns in background

The collecting site, named the Tuckers Tunnel prospect, consists of a series of pits, trenches and short adits on an east-west trending structure cutting Paleozoic sedimentary carbonate-rich rocks. All minerals noted here have been found in the dumps at this prospect. The best mineralization was found in small openings in fractures and veins in blocks of angular carbonate-rich breccia with visible secondary copper mineralization. There are, however, many prospects, (the Mary Murphy Mine, for example) scattered in the area to the north that show copper mineralization and associated radioactivity. These prospects, unlike those at Tuckers Tunnel, do not show the variety of mineral species or the breccia that is the host for the minerals described here.

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Tuckerville, Colorado

By webmaster at 2:18 pm on February 15, 2009 | No comments

In the mid-1970’s I spent several field seasons working in the southern San Juan Mountains of Colorado.  One of the more interesting properties examined was in the Cave Basin Mining District located about 25 miles NE of Durango on the Hinsdale-LaPlata County common line. The area is reached from Forest Service gravel and dirt logging roads and a series of jeep trails starting at the NE end of Vallecito Lake. The primary collecting site, known as the Tucker’s Tunnel Prospect, is located on the north side of a prominent, rounded mountain known as Runlett Peak.

Runlett Peak from west. Tucker's Tunnel on forward slope to left of light area.

Access to this site may be limited. In 1976-77 this was a wilderness study area with an established wilderness about a mile to the north. Access on good gravel road from the north end of Vallicito Lake should take one to within about a mile of the prospect in any case. Elevations in the area range between 10,000 and 11,500 feet and there can be severe weather at any time of year.

This is a spectacular location for unusual micromount specimens.  Not only are there species first described here for Colorado (chonichalcite), but this is the type locality for a new mineral, theisite, first found here and described by contractors with the Bendix Corporation in 1982.

Tucker's Tunnel, main dumps

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