|
Gold Deposits of California
- Discovery.
- Mineralogical description of
specimens sent to War-Office.
- Ancient Gold Mines.
- South American Gold Mines large
masses found.
- Extent of the California deposits,
and plan of working them
- Metalliferous diluvial deposits of
the United States found in high levels.
- Galena of the Mississippi Valley, and
copper of Lake Superior.
- Value of the California Mines.
- Sacramento and San Joaquin Valley.
- Want of Geological date.
- Sierra Nevada.
- Character of the deposit.
- Observations of Colonel Mason.
- Extent of this mineral development.
- Probability of the original veins
being found in the more elevated slate
and quartz
rocks.
1. The discovery of gold in California
makes the year 1848 an era in the
history of that country. It was
accidentally found, in the Spring
season, in the diluvial soil, by some
persons digging the sluiceway for a
mill. Specimens of the various kinds of
the metal and its matrix were forwarded
to the War Department by the chief
military officer in command, in the
month of August. These specimens were
not received at the War-Office till
early in December. I examined them in
the library of that office, on the 8th
of that month. They consisted of
thirteen specimens of various minerals,
chiefly gold in some of its metallic
forms.
2. Judged by external character, the
specimens admitted of being grouped in
the following manner:
- Small masses of native gold, in the
separate form of grains and scales, or
minute plates, from which all extraneous
matter had been cleanly washed.
- Similar forms of equally fine, and
highly colored masses, with the loose
residuary iron sand of the washer.
- Masses of scale-form gold of an ounce
or more in weight, but offering no other
peculiarity of character.
- An ovate mass of two ounces weight,
having a portion of its original matrix
of quartz still adhering.
All the scale-form, and lump gold,
exhibits, more or less distinctly, the
marks of
attrition, and of having been carried in
its alluvial association in the valley
of the
American fork of the Sacramento, some
distance from its original position. It
is of the sub-species of gold yellow
native gold of the systems the
Gold-gelber Gediegen Gold, of Werner.
The specific gravity of this variety, in
its refined state, is generally from
17,000 to 19,000. By analysis, it is
sometimes found to contain very minute
portions of silver and copper.1
The preceding notices embrace all the
specimens of native gold in the thirteen
separate packages received at the
War-Office, exclusive of the caddy,
named in Colonel Mason s report. The
following comprise the other
mineralogical species sent.
- Native masses of a metal of a light
steel grey color, approaching to white,
of considerable weight. These are
scale-form; resembling in this, and in
size, the scale or plate gold. They
present the peculiar color of platina,
which it is difficult, how ever, to
distinguish from palladium. The specific
gravity of native platina varies between
15,601 and 18,947, but reaches, in its
original state, 23,000.2
- Angular masses of a white mineral, of
a dull metallic lustre and coarse
granular fracture, which has the
external characters of iron pyrites.
- A lump of red-colored ore. This mass
is a large and heavy specimen of the ore
of mercury, called cinnabar, and is well
characterized as the dark red variety of
the systems.3
- Arenaceous magnetic ironstone, of its
usual form, color, lustre, and specific
gravity. This ore is the residium after
washing away the alluvial matter from
the grain and scale gold, and has been
transmitted to denote that fact, and not
as attaching any importance to its
value.4
3. In appreciating the gold formation of
California, we may derive some light
from
the history of the discovery of this
mineral in other quarters of the globe.
Much of the native gold of Asia, Africa
and Europe, of ancient periods, was
found in earthy deposits in the beds or
valleys of streams, or plains which have
been produced from the disintegration,
gradual degradation, or removal of
pre-existing rocks. The early sources of
gold bullion, of which the bed of the
Pactolus is a memorable example, have
been long exhausted. And as the surface
gold of later ages has been picked up,
or washed out, its origin has been
generally traced to fixed veins in
contiguous mountains, where the expense
of crushing the hard rock has been found
to be well-nigh equal to, and sometimes
more than, the value of the gold. In
other cases there has been a complete
exhaustion, as at the Lead-hills in
Scotland, where, in the time of Queen
Elizabeth,
£100,000 sterling was obtained
in a few seasons from the alluvial soil.
(Jameson.)
4. A very large proportion of the native
gold of South America, which has yielded
more gold than any other part of the
world, is explored in diluvial or
disintegrated soil, which is generally
found spread out at the foot of
mountains or out bursting valleys from
table-lands. Such, too, was the position
of the Mexican gold, although, at
present, it is mined chiefly in quartz
veins, in connection with silver and
other ores, in mountains of mica-slate
and gneiss. It is altogether probable,
and would be in accordance with recorded
facts in other parts of the world, that
such should also be the relative
position of the native gold to the
original gold-bearing veins in
California. The fact of the existence of
virgin gold in the plains of that
province was not unknown to the Spanish.
Humboldt, prior to 1816, mentions that
there is a plain of fourteen leagues
(forty-two English miles) in extent on
the California coast, with an alluvial5
deposit, in which lumps of gold are
dispersed, (vide Nueva Espania.) The
same author states that a lump of gold
was found in Choco weighing twenty-five
pounds, and that another was obtained
near La Paz, in Peru, in 1730, which
weighed forty-two pounds. He gives the
annual produce of the gold mines of the
Spanish American colonies at 25,026
pounds Troy. The gold of Brazil is
chiefly washed from the sands of rivers
and other earthy and unconsolidated
deposits, which stretch at the foot of a
high chain of mountains running nearly
parallel to the coast, from 5° to 30° of
south latitude. From this region nearly
30,000 Portuguese marcs of gold are
annually exported to Europe, making the
annual produce of gold of the gold mines
of Spanish and Portuguese America,
45,580 pounds Troy; equal to 9,844,280
American dollars.
5. Whatever be the extent, value, and
permanency of the gold distributed in
the diluvium or later river deposits of
California, and it cannot be doubted to
be relatively valuable, we should adopt,
in relation to it, a policy which, while
it respects
the experience of science, and the
results of mining and metallurgy in
other countries, commends itself to our
institutions by its comprehensive and
practical features.
6. It is one of the traits of the
metalliferous diluvial deposits of the
United States, that they spread over
extensive areas of surface; that they
lie at very considerable elevations
above the present water-level of
adjacent seas, lakes, and rivers; that
they are, as a consequence, free from
the general power of action which these
waters, in their present state, can
exert upon the areas as such; and that
the exploration and working of the beds
is attended with comparatively little
labor or expense, so long as the effort
is confined to the soil. It would
appear, in contemplating this question
of diluvial action, as if it had exerted
itself with greater force and violence,
and with a more degrading power, upon
our high lands and summits than in the
old world, so as to demolish the solid
surface of rocks, and break them up, to
a greater depth, and to scatter their
disrupted veins of mineral matter over
more extensive districts.
7. Such are the impressions in examining
the remarkable diluvial and injected
deposits of galena of Missouri, Iowa,
and northern Illinois; the gold debris
and pebble diluvium of the Appalachian
spine in the Southern States; and the
widespread copper-boulder diluvium of
the basin of Lake Superior. In each of
these cases the original metal-bearing
rocks have been broken down by ancient
diluvial action, and scattered over wide
areas of country. In each case, also,
the first discovery, or eventual working
of these extemporaneous mines, was
accompanied by a public excitement,
hundreds and thousands rushing to the
field; and in each case the explorations
terminated, after the most extravagant
anticipations of easily-got wealth, in
tracing the origin and supply of the
drift deposits to contiguous veins in
the undisturbed rocks.
8. No determinations can be safely made,
d, priori, upon the extent and permanent
value of the gold deposits under
consideration. Our actual knowledge of
the geography and resources of the
country is limited. Of its geology and
mineralogy, further than conclusions can
be guessed at, from the loose letters of
the day, and the examination of the
specimens which are named above, and the
assays of the mint, we know nothing. Its
coast latitudes, and the height and
distance of its interior positions, are,
it is believed, accurately described and
fixed, and made accessible, together
with a valuable amount of information
collected of its vegetable physiology,
and military and maritime advantages, by
the several officers of the navy and
army, who have reported and published
the results of their observations.
9. In the geographical memoir
accompanying Colonel Fremont s map,
communicated to the Senate, in
compliance with its resolutions of the
5th and 15th of June last, the
Sacramento and San Joacquin Rivers are
described as the natural development of
one valley, whose waters, rising at
opposite extremities, meet in its
centre, and unite their channels before
reaching tide-water at the head of the
Bay of San Francisco. Both rivers are
represented as drawing their sources and
chief tributaries from the Sierra Nevada
chain of mountains, through a wide belt
of "foot-hills."
These are covered, to a considerable
extent, with large oaks, pines, and some
other deciduous and perennial
forest-trees, and afford in their
valleys and plains extensive and
valuable tracts of fertile soil, fit for
the purposes of agriculture.
10. There is no description of the
range, dip, or geological constitution
or character, of the hills and
elevations reputed to yield gold; of the
soils which rest upon their tops, sides,
or valleys; or of the rock formations of
higher altitudes; this intrepid and
accurate observer, having confined his
attention chiefly to the topographical
features of the country, and the various
phenomena which determine its capacity
for supporting animal and vegetable
life. It is seen, as an incidental
feature of his notes, that the plains of
the Sacramento and San Joaquin are
covered with the debris and drift soil
of higher altitudes, whose deposition
may be regarded essentially as the
result of diluvial, and not river
action. In the present state of our
information, we must regard the native
gold, scales and lumps, as one of the
elements of this reproduced mass. How
far they have been transported is
unknown. Whether the beds are deep or
shallow, extended or limited, has not
been observed. Whether the gold is found
in the valleys or depressions
exclusively, or also on the hills or
plains, is equally unknown. In order to
form just conceptions on the subject, it
would be desirable also to ascertain
whether, if the elevated lands afford
gold, it is in the same relative
proportion to the soil, gravel, and
sand, as in the valleys; whether there
are any appearances, in the dry runs or
sides of hills, of the loose materials
being in the state of a debris, which
has not been far removed; or any other
indication of the proximity of fixed
veins.
11. It is known from the history of the
earliest discovery of gold that volcanic
rocks, certainly lavas and the newer
formations, never yield it; and it
cannot, therefore, be supposed to come
from the vitreous peaks and eminences of
the Sierra Nevada. This bold mountain
chain, which, under several names,
extends along the Pacific coast, from
Mount Elias to the Gulf of California,
has probably lifted up, on its western
sides, the granites, clay-slates,
mica-slates, clay-porphyries, and other
strata, whose detritus and comminuted
fragments are found in the Valley of the
Sacramento, HI the shape of pebbles and
sands. Such, at least, in the absence of
all observation, may be presumed to be
the true position of these gold
deposits. Colonel Fremont, in
approaching that part of the Sacramento,
which is now the theatre of gold
washings, observed "a yellowish,
gravelly soil" along its eastern banks.
(Geog. Mem., p. 23.) He is speaking of
the permanent upland soil, which he
states to be 560 feet above the level of
the sea, and high above the influence of
the floods of the rainy season. Here,
then, is evidence of the diluvial
character of the general soil, and of
its origin in higher positions. Mount
Tsashtl, which is stated by him to
divide the lower from the upper Valley
of the Sacramento, is placed by that
observer at 14,000 feet above the sea;
which is nearly the height of Mont
Blanc. (Geo. Mem., p. 25.) This stream,
he observes, falls not less than 2000
feet in twenty miles, in passing, at the
base of this mountain, from its upper to
its lower Valley. This denotes a marked
altitude for all its eastern
tributaries, which flow immediately from
the foot of the continuous line of the
Sierra Nevada. Many of these tributaries
are nearly dry, except in the rainy
season, when they are swelled to
torrents, which must exert a powerful
action upon the loose materials of their
beds.
12. Here we perceive another class of
phenomena, which may materially affect
the value, position, and permanence of
the California gold deposits. The whole
weight of the popular testimony derived
from letters, a species of testimony
which, in this feature, may be admitted,
is in favor of the position of the metal
in the transported soil; nothing but
bars, shovels, and pickaxes being
necessary to pursue the search. There is
no affirmation that any person is
pursuing a rock-vein, or has employed a
blast. There is some reason to believe
that the scale gold is of the oldest
era, and that it has been transported
the longest distance from its original
veins. These minuter pieces approximate,
in this respect, to the dust gold of the
African coast, which has been found
along the low, sandy, alluvial shores of
that country, for the space of 130
leagues, at very great distances below
the interior high lands, and without, so
far as is known, ever having been traced
to its original beds. Were the degraded
inhabitants of that coast required to be
paid but a moderate per diem for the
time they devote in its search, and
filling it in the quills of birds to be
offered to traders and mariners on the
coast, it is not probable that the
commerce or circulating medium of the
world would be enriched thereby another
aroba.
13. There is but one further source of
testimony respecting the value and
position of these beds, which does not
differ, however, in the general view it
presents, from the preceding. Colonel R.
B. Mason, in his report of the 17th of
August last, that is to say, about three
months after the first discovery of gold
on the Rio de los Americanos, visited
that location, and describes the
position of the gold deposit as
constituting " the bank close by the
stream." The sides of the hills were
covered with tents and bush arbors. This
deposit, as witnessed in the washings,
was made up of "coarse stones," "earthy
matter," "gravel," and " gold mixed with
a heavy, fine, black sand." This gold "
is in fine, bright scales;" being, if
the preceding views are well taken, of
the oldest era, or the class of deposits
in which the gold is farthest removed
from its parent bed. In ascending the
stream, in its south fork, twenty-five
miles higher, he found the country
became more broken and mountainous, and
covered with the species of pine (Pinus
lambertiana), the value of which first
led to the discovery. He was now at the
distance of fifty miles from the
confluence of this stream with the
Sacramento; and he estimates the hills
at "about 1000 feet above the Sacramento
Plain." This was the position of the
original discovery, which was made in
the bottom of the stream, in a newly
washed "bed of mud and gravel," washed
out of a millrace. At a still higher
point, on the north banks of the stream
among the mountains, in the bed of a dry
run, he visited another locality, where
coarser pieces of gold were found. All
the gold was found in the beds or on the
immediate banks of watercourses, in a
gravelly soil. Such deposits had been
found to yield gold, whenever examined
in " the numerous gullies or ravines
that occur in that mountain region." It
was invariably " mixed with the washed
gravel, or lodged in the crevices of
other rocks." None had been found in its
matrix in fixed rocks. The country is
much broken and intersected in every
direction by small streams or ravines,
in all which, so far as explored, gold
had been found. The circle of the
discoveries was every day enlarging. It
had then extended north of the Rio de
los Americanos to the Bear River, the
Yuba, and the los Plumas, or Feather
River; from the beds and ravines of
which gold was brought by the Indians
and by others. It had also extended
south to the Cosumnes, a tributary of
the San Joaquin.
14. Such is the
description of an officer who personally
visited the principal theatre of mining
operations, who conversed with the persons
of chief note concerned in these
extemporaneous and precarious searches, and
with the operative diggers of every sort,
and who has transmitted, as the result of
this visit, the several specimens of gold
and other minerals herein noticed. About
seventy miles from south to north, and fifty
miles from west to east these having been
the directions of discovery, were embraced
within its extreme points.6
15. There is too little known, however,
of the geological character, origin, and
extent of this deposit to determine the
principal points upon which its ultimate
value and permanency may turn. Are we to
consider the hill-diluvion as the source
whence the deposits of gold in the
ravines and valleys have been washed by
the spontaneous action of the rivers and
floods of centuries? If so, it is
certain that these rich deposits will be
exhausted in a comparatively short
period; and the undisturbed elevated
tracts of pebble-drift must be relied on
to sustain the supply. The proportion of
gold this elder stratum may yield will,
doubtless, be less than the valley and
gully deposits, and may but moderately
reward the laborer for his search, if it
reward him at all. If, on the contrary,
the gorges and valleys which have had
their outflow from the disintegrated
schists and quartz, and .the crystalline
and granular rock formations which
probably lie at the foot of the Sierra
Nevada an elevation which, agreeably to
facts above noticed, is at least two
thousand feet above the lower and
central waters of the Sacramento, then
the search must be extended up and
across the valleys, in order that it may
terminate in fixed mines. In any view,
careful and scientific examinations are
necessary to arrive at just conclusions.
December 1848.
It appears that the gold is found in
valleys of denudation crossing the
stratification, and that the deposits,
which are by the spring freshets
rendered alluvial, are renewed with the
freshets of every season. That these
will contain less and less gold every
season after a period, and finally yield
too small a percentage to reward labor,
is very probable, and nearly certain. At
that period, fixed mining in the
gold-yielding strata with quartz veins
must commence. The quartz veins and the
gold veins will, from recent
information, be found one and the same,
and their perfect geological identity
may be relied on, although no gold may
be perceptible to the eye, if present at
all, for distances in the range of the
veins.
As yet we are without a geological
account of the district, which is the
reason of this paper being retained, and
printed with these materials. Meanwhile,
the subject of the Indian claim to
remuneration for the territory is one
which should be met on grounds of entire
justice and benevolence.
June 1850.
1a. Analysis at the United States Mint,
has determined the value of the gold
specimens sent by the Secretary of War,
to be, before melting, &18.05J per
ounce, and after refining, $18.50
denoting an extraordinary degree of
purity in the native gold.
2a. Platina has been found at only two
places in South America; namely, at
Choco, in New Grenada, and at Barbacoa,
between 2 and 6 north latitude; and this
metal has never yet been traced north of
the straits of Panama. It is associated
with palladium and iridium. It occurs,
in these localities, in diluvial soils,
along with grains of gold, zincon,
spinel quartz and. magnetic ironstone.
We may expect all these associations to
be verified in the deposits of
California.
3a. The most important mines of cinnabar
now known, are at Almaden, in Spain,
which have been worked upwards of two
thousand years; at Idria, in Friaul; in
the Palatinate; and at Deux Ponts, in
Spanish America. The specific gravity of
the Almadian ore is 7.786. The word
cinnabar was anciently applied to the
drug called Dragon s-blood.
4a. This mineral is distributed widely in
the rocks and soils of the United
States. It constitutes an element in all
the rich alluvions of the Mississippi
Valley, and is very abundant on the
shores of the upper lakes, where it is
driven up by the waves; but being
heavier than the silicious sands, it
sinks at the water s edge, while the
former are winnowed out by the winds,
and form banks at higher altitudes. Tons
of it together, lie in this pure form,
on the banks of Lake Superior.
5a. This term was vaguely applied, at the
era, to two distinct classes of
phenomena.
6a. Subsequent discoveries, embracing the
period up to October, 1850, denote this
development of native gold to reach, in
its extreme points, not less than one
thousand miles, namely, from the Gold
Mountain in S. E. California to Oregon.
Archives Of
Aboriginal Knowledge
Archives Of Aboriginal
Knowledge, Henry R. Schoolcraft, 1860
Free
Genealogy |
Indian
Genealogy |
Archives Of Aboriginal Knowledge
|
|