Tomahawk Basin, Colorado: Fluorite

By webmaster at 11:02 am on April 24, 2008 | No comments

In the mid-1970’s I spent some time working in SW Colorado in the La Plata Mountains near Durango. This area has produced significant gold (the Bessie G mine, for example, was active at that time) and has been investigated for its porphyry copper potential and uranium as well.

The Tomahawk Mine and basin are located above timberline in the western part of the complex. Rocks in the area include a variety of intrusives and metamorphosed sediments that form the high ridges and cliffs around the head of Tomahawk Creek. The Tomahawk mine produced gold in the last century. At the time I worked in the area there was still a very thin, rich vein containing visible gold accessible (if you were a skilled rock climber) on the cliff face at the creek near the mine ruins.

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Above: Tomahawk Basin seen from high ridge to SE.

Below: Tomahawk Mine structures in 1975.

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What passed for a road ended a few hundred yards west of the mine at a drill site located near a small intrusive complex. Talus from the high cliffs to the south of this intrusive contained scattered vugs that were mineralized with epidote, quartz, K-feldspar and rare fluorite. The fluorite crystals were simple octahedrons of a rich violet color. Their maximum size was about 2 mm.

I have always thought that it would be worthwhile to investigate the area for the source of the fluorite. Perhaps there are larger cavities and better crystals in the larger talus or lower cliff faces a few hundred feet up and to the south of the intrusive. Are there any of you energetic young collectors interested?

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Mclaughlin Mine, stibnite

By webmaster at 4:30 pm on April 8, 2008 | No comments

In the early 1980’s development work at the Homestake Mining Company Mclaughlin Mine project at the junction of Napa, Lake and Yolo counties in California turned up some nice stibnite specimens. Drill core from some areas contained scattered stibnite in veins and vugs, and in one case, stout crystals up to 3-8 cm in a wide calcite vein. The best specimens from this period, however, were found when a bulk sample decline was sunk in a near-surface part of the ore body. This work was designed to sample an area of the silicified Knoxville formation mudstone, a significant gold host on the property. Numerous quartz-chalcedony veins in the workings contained stibnite in masses, radiating sprays and in small vugs. The best specimens showed bright, needle-like sprays up to 3 cm in open vugs lined with bright micro quartz.

The muck (bulk sample) piles provided lots of fine samples, sometimes in masses of radiating crystals up to several pounds. The exposed faces in the decline were great for finding vugs, but were dangerous and usually only accessable after a blast when the fumes were sure to cause a nice ‘nitro’ headache. A contract minor was severely injured by rockfall at the working face during this period.

There are still a few of these specimens around; there should have been a lot available from the pit as it progressed, but I only have a few remaining. One is pictured here.

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