Nightingale Mining District: Difference between revisions

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* J. H. East, Jr., and Russel R. Trengov, "[http://www.nbmg.unr.edu/scans/3400/34000013.pdf Investigation of Nightingale Tungsten Deposit, Pershing County, Nev.]," Report of Investigation 4678, United Stated Department of the Interior, 1950.
* J. H. East, Jr., and Russel R. Trengov, "[http://www.nbmg.unr.edu/scans/3400/34000013.pdf Investigation of Nightingale Tungsten Deposit, Pershing County, Nev.]," Report of Investigation 4678, United Stated Department of the Interior, 1950.
* "Tungsten Ground Developed by M.G.L Corporation," May 6, 1942, p. 6, Reno Evening Gazette.  The area is known as the Senator Cowles tungsten property.  Includes two pictures, one of Senator Cowles.
* "Tungsten Ground Developed by M.G.L Corporation," May 6, 1942, p. 6, Reno Evening Gazette.  The area is known as the Senator Cowles tungsten property.  Includes two pictures, one of Senator Cowles.
* [http://www.mindat.org/loc-37161.html | Nightingale District] (Mindat)
* [http://www.mindat.org/loc-37161.html Nightingale District] (Mindat)


[[Category:Mining districts]]
[[Category:Mining districts]]

Latest revision as of 02:22, 15 May 2016

The Nightingale Mining District east of Winnemucca Lake.[1]

Mineral Resources 1921 states: "The Hanson claims on the east side of the Nightingale Mountains were prospected and ore much better than the average is said to have been taken out. Heavy bodies of iron sulphides are said to have been cut a short distance below the surface"[2].

Hess and Larsen (1921) writes: "FA Anderson has a group of claims covering tactite deposits on the south end of the main ridge of the Juniper Range in sees 19 and 30 T 25 N R 26 E. The point overlooks the between the Juniper and Nightingale ranges and the workings the east side of the Nightingale Range about 6 miles away are plain sight. The claims were formerly located for copper and a shaft was sunk in the diorite in which to judge from the dump several hundred feet of workings must have been driven. A couple of good cabins have been erected. The scheelite deposit is in vertical thin bedded limestone and hardened shale probably the same rocks as were elsewhere called Jurassic by the Fortieth Parallel Survey. It crops out for about half a mile striking N 50 E At the southwest end nearest the cabins the ore body is about 6 feet wide and the sediments are wholly altered to a mass of dark red brown garnet dark green epidote iron oxide formed by the weathering of chalco pyrite finely acicular actinolite quartz calcite and scheelite. The metamorphism lessens toward the northeast and at the northeast end where the limestone bed is thinner only about one half of it is thoroughly metamorphosed. At the southwest end the ore is at least as rich as any tactite seen elsewhere by the writers. The scheelite is in pieces as much as 2 1/2 inches or possibly more in longest dimension and some of it shows fair crystal form with a tendency to form crystals whose cross sections are rectangles. The scheelite is naturally pure white but is largely stained green by malachite. Toward the northeast end it occurs in very small particles. The scheelite follows the bedding planes and a piece of tactite 2 inches thick may have a good crust of scheelite on one side and very little on the other Several holes from 6 to 50 feet deep have been dug at different places and probably 30 tons of ore had been mined when the deposit was visited July 7 1917. The nearest water is at Linton's well 5 miles west."[3]


Mineral Resources 1929 "The Tungsten Production Co. (Inc.), of Boulder, Colo., did some work on its properties in the Nightingale district."[4]

C.W. Chesterman, S. W. Hobbs, "Reconnaissance Map of Central Nightingale Range," 1945

See Also

References

  1. Joseph V. Tingley, "Mining Districts of Nevada," Report 47, Nevada Bureau of Mines and Geology, 1998, 2nd Edition. See map for details.
  2. "Mineral Resources of the United States," p. 979, 1921.
  3. F. L. Hess and E. S. Larsen, "Contact-Metamorphic Tungsten Deposits of the U. S.," USGS 725D, p 282-285, 1921.
  4. "Mineral Resources of the United States," p. 98, 1929.

External Resources