Black Rock Desert/Sulphur Mining District
The southern part of the Black Rock Desert is a nice day trip from Reno and includes a variety of geologic environments, mines, trails and historic sites along with the flora and fauna typical of the Basin and Range. Leaving Reno at 05:30 we drove around the south end of Pyramid Lake and turned north. It was just full light when we passed the tiny community of Empire, five miles south of Gerlach, where a large deposit of gypsum has been mined and processed for decades.
Gerlach means Bruno’s, the only place to eat and one that serves meals definitely not for sissys. It is located at the west end of the Black Rock and is the last outpost of civilization for nearly a hundred miles in any direction.
We breakfasted and then turned south for a few miles to pick up the road along the south edge of the Black Rock. This is a gravel and mud track that parallels the railroad between Gerlach and Winnemucca some 100 miles to the east. The only activity in this area is around the Hycroft Mine at Sulphur, about halfway between the two towns. We proceeded to drive east enjoying stunning views of the Chocolate Mountains, the Black Rock to the north and local points of interest. These included a rather cold pine gopher (bull) snake and the markers indicating the passing of the emigrants along the Applegate Trail in the 1840’s. Tracks are still visible in the alkali at the edges of the Black Rock where wagons passed more than 150 years ago.



Approaching Sulphur the large and colorful waste piles and leach pads of the mining operation are visible from 15 miles away. This property produced gold and silver and then sulphur and aulunite in the past but more recently, since the 1980’s, has produced gold and silver from low-grade ore bodies associated with hydrothermal activity along Basin and Range faulting.
The alteration along the structures has produced a rich range of colors in the rocks that include reds, ocher and stark white with many shades of browns and grays. Current operators are expanding the known ore zones and will resume mining operations in the near future. All ores are processed by heap-leaching, the most efficient method of extracting gold from the low-grade ores. The old town site of Sulphur is adjacent to the railroad tracks about a mile west of the Hycroft Mine. Only a few foundations and building and equipment remnants remain.
This property has produced interesting specimens of sulphur, cinnabar, stibnite, opalized and silicified rocks, calcite and some more uncommon minerals in isolated occurrences. At the north end of the property is an occurrence of silicified reeds near a ‘fossil’ hot spring.
To be continued…
