Black Rock-Sulphur Mining District, continued

By webmaster at 6:31 pm on October 20, 2008 | No comments

Rabbit Hole Spring

Leaving the Sulphur area we drove a few miles to Rosebud Canyon and the Rabbit Hole Springs. Rosebud Canyon was placered by early prospectors and there is a small, currently inactive underground silver mine (Rosebud Mine) as well.  This mine has produced some excellent specimens of barite and a variety of silver minerals. Again, there are a number of trail markers with information from the journals of travelers in the wagon trains. Rabbit Hole Spring at the west end of the canyon was a welcome stop for the weary emigrants as they prepared to start the trek north across the Black Rock Desert.

Feldspar-Quartz Veins in Granite

Following the path of the emigrant trail from Rabbit Hole Spring to the Gerlach-Winnemucca road we turned west, stopping for a look at an area with reported trilobite fossils.  Directions were vague and we didn’t have time for prospecting so a bit of research will be needed before returning for another try. We hiked around the base of a granite intrusive, checking out some prominent veins of feldspar and quartz. They were barren with no associated openings or loose areas where one might find crystals.

Trego Hot Springs is near the road about 20 miles east of Gerlach. It consists of a series of pools and ‘tanks’ surrounded by cottonwood, willow and tamarisk trees wiTrego Hot Springth lush grasses and cattails in the wetter areas. It is truly an oasis in the desert and it attracts wildlife of all kinds. It is a popular spot for campers and bathers; one should be careful to not surprise anyone who has “forgotten” their bathing suit. The source of the warm water here is a series of wells drilled into artisian, geothermally heated groundwaters.                  Clinozoisite Crystals in Skarn

The crystal-clear pool pictured is about 85 degrees warm and has an 8 inch pipe in the center running about 20-30 gallons per minute.
The last stop of the day was at a small tungsten prospect high on the mountain overlooking the western Black Rock. The workings are in a fairly thin carbonate unit near the contact with a granite intrusive. The beds are very steeply dipping to overturned and show a typical development of garnet-diopside and marble skarn. There are a few boulders or outcrops showing rather large (to 10 inches) crystal sprays of clinozoisite but they are uncollecteble on the massive, tough blocks of skarn. Garnet is common in the skarn although crystals are indistinct.
Train on Black Rock

As we headed down the trail to our truck we could see rain and snow showers to the north in the Granite Range. A brisk wind and cold sprinkles hurried us along as a train passed headed for the West Coast.

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Nightingale Mining District

By webmaster at 12:36 pm on June 16, 2008 | No comments

A nice mineral collecting day trip from the Reno area is to the Nightingale Mining District, an area with many mines and interesting geology, flora and fauna. The area produced mostly tungsten with some by-products but has not been significantly active since the demand for the metal declined after the Korean War. There are a number of major mines with associated ruins as well as hundreds of smaller prospects. As with all such areas, approach any mining area with caution. Do not enter mine openings and remember that not all shafts and pits are fenced.

We approached Nightingale from the southwest from the south end of Pyramid Lake and the town of Nixon. Pyramid Lake is one of the largest and deepest desert lakes in the Great Basin; is is one of the remnants of the huge Lake Lahontan that covered thousands of square miles in northwestern Nevada several thousand years ago. From Nixon a gravel road trends north and east crossing a divide to the basin of Winnemucca (dry) Lake. This lake bed is long and narrow and parallels the Nightingale Mountains on the west. Our goal was the MGL mine, some 7 miles north of the main access road and a mile or two up into the mountains.

tufa and lakebed
The road north passes some spectacular volcanic geology and excellent examples of ancient shorelines with associated tufa mounds. in several areas old beach deposits consist of hard, cemented gravels made up of black eroded igneous rocks that flank the basin in the area.

At the lower end of the canyon where the MGL Mine is located is the cement foundation of the processing plant where tungsten ores were concentrated. The ores were crushed and the heavier minerals containing tungsten were separated and concentrated during several stages of processing as they traveled down through the mill. Concentrates were hauled by truck to a railroad for transport to refining plants outside the area.

mgl mill foundation
The road up the canyon required a bit of careful driving and would not be passable in wet weather. The ore chute or dump is located below the main mining operations. Open cuts in the tungsten bearing rocks can be seen above it. There are several adits (horizontal tunnels) that access the ore zones and allow the ores to be moved down and out to be loaded on trucks for the trip down-canyon to the mill.

mgl ore chute and mine

The dumps around the ore chute and along the access roads contain many of the minerals that can be found in the open pits and tunnels. The MGL Mine is known for particularly fine specimens of large, brown andradite garnets as well as clinozoisite. Some of the best examples can be etched from calcite that fills some veins and pockets, protecting the crystals. Other minerals include pyrite, quartz, tremolite, copper secondary minerals and rare molybdenite.mgl open pit/garnet area

Although the area is dry this time of year there are a variety of flowers and lots of lizards. Desert plume, Stanleya pinnata, is one of the more spectacular. Lizards like the black-collared, the western whiptail and the sagebrush lizard abound. It must have been a productive spring for them, because there were little lizards everywhere. It is amusing to see a 3-inch lizard on a 6-inch rock, protecting his territory with all of his bravado. The bigger lizards get to protect bigger rocks, and even graduate to a boulder if they are really assertive. And they run like the wind! Even the littlest ones will raise a small plume of dust as they dash down the road.

mgl garnet clinozoisite

desert plume

Returning to the main access road we again went northeast over a pass of about 6,000 feet in elevation to the site of the Nightingale Mines. Here are cement foundations and a metal stack and a large water tank that provided water for the milling operation. Most of the metal structures have been riddled by bullet holes and there is considerable trash left by campers. I have never thought of a water tank as a challenging target, but it must be.

lizard hanging out

The mining here was concentrated in a steeply-dipping sedimentary unit some 15 to 20 feet thick that has been metamorphosed by nearby and included granitic intrusives. The mining covers some half-mile of strike and has left large, open cuts and overhangs. Dumps contain a similar assortment of minerals as seen at the MGL Mine, but the rock is ‘tighter’ with less opportunity for good specimens where we checked.

black collared lizard
Returning over Nightingale Pass we stopped at some smaller workings known as the Jay Bird Mine but found nothing of interest. The rest of the trip was uneventful. Pyramid Lake was calm and some the local white pelicans were having a meeting on the beach as we passed by. All in all a very good day.

Nightingale mine openings

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