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LEGENDARY
GHOST TOWNS
Stay
Out of That Old Mine! |
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By
Sandin Phillipson |
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It seems like the most
adventurous thing in the world. That dark opening in the hillside beckons,
tantalizes, excites. What wondrous treasures await discovery inside? What
artifacts might remain in this time capsule, mute testimony to an era when
grizzled men moved tons of rock in pursuit of their dreams? Such is the
poetic, romance-novel appeal that might induce you to take leave of your
senses and crawl into an old mine. Thousands of such small openings are
scattered throughout the country. Although most common in the historically
"hard rock" Western mining states, they can also be found in the old lead
and copper districts of the Midwest. In reality, multiple dangers lurk
beyond the pale ring of light that filters through the adit mouth.
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Old mine in Nevadaville,
Colorado,
Kathy Weiser, August, 2003
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scoping out a field area for a thesis project, I spent six weeks
camping and hiking in the West Elk Mountains, in the
Colorado
Rockies. My days were spent tramping around the flanks of a majestic
13,000-foot peak, chosen due to tantalizing reports of silver mining
activity around 1900. During my ramblings, I came across several old
mine workings. Some were simply short adits driven into the hillside,
designed to test for the presence of silver, copper, and lead minerals
that might be distributed within the contact zone of the porphyry
intrusive that defined the mountain peak. Other workings, though
small, were relatively more sophisticated and had rail tracks
extending from the passageways out onto the progressively extended
pile of fine waste rock. I explored each of these, sometimes crawling
over piles of rock that had fallen from the roof or ribs, or widening
a hole and sliding down the pile of washed-in dirt to reach the adit
floor.
This really was the height of folly, as I was alone in
the wilderness and had no idea of the potential dangers. I currently
work in the field of ground control engineering, and have firsthand
knowledge of numerous fatalities that occurred in active mines when
rock fell out of the roof without warning. I have also become more
familiar with the extensive engineering design work, and variety of
support systems, required to develop and maintain a mine opening. The
"old timers" were often lucky by developing small openings in hard
rock, but modern mining engineering indicates that time does not favor
stability.
A more insidious
danger is represented by a lack of breathable air. In sealed
underground openings, the air may have become "stale" by not being
circulated through the outside. In modern mines, a staff is devoted to
designing and maintaining ventilation systems that cycle fresh air
through the mine. Some gases displace oxygen, but are colorless and
odorless and give no warning of danger until the person suddenly
realizes that they feel as though they have been holding their breath
for several minutes. This is a condition known to miners as "black
damp" that can cause loss of consciousness or death.
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While working in Bolivia, I entered over a dozen small
mines in a district that had been developed initially by the Spanish, or
perhaps even the Inca, and later by a Polish mining engineer in the early
1900’s. The most modern operation had closed in the 1980’s, when the
underground portion of the mine was abandoned as uneconomical, but a small
open pit was developed that intersected some of the old workings. As a
geologist working to unravel the geological history of this area, I
entered the mine to document the relationships between intrusive phases.
As I was intently concentrating on the last face of the mine, trying to
decide if the rock was rhyodacite or dacite, I suddenly noticed a warm,
tingly, numb sensation in my nose and lips. Panicked, I exhaled what
little air remained in my lungs and held my breath, while at the same time
wheeling and sprinting back up the tunnel. Weird, ghastly shapes of rotten
canvas and timbers danced in the shadows thrown by my flashlight. I had
little hope of sprinting the nearly 300 yards to the mine mouth, but as
gray spots floated before my eyes, I determined to keep my legs pumping to
at least get out of what might only be a pocket of bad air. Then I saw a
sliver of light where the floor of the open pit had intersected the
tunnel. Fresh air! I ran to the cut and gulped in the thin mountain air.
Although the air smelled like decaying sulfides, at least the threat of
black damp was gone, and so my panic subsided enough to allow me to walk
briskly out of the mine.
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The Mary Murphy Mine near St. Elmo,
Colorado,
August, 2003, Kathy Weiser.
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Crawling into an old mine, in which no miner or engineer
has evaluated the condition for decades, is something that I would now
consider as pure stupidity. No shiny bauble or rusty artifact is worth it.
Take a picture of that beckoning hole, and then leave it alone. Remember
that the "old timers" have already taken out the rock and dumped it on the
ground for you. Satisfy yourself with a little piece of azurite,
malachite, chalcopyrite, or pyrite from the dump pile if you must have a
souvenir, but stay out of that mine!
Added August, 2005
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About
The Author:
Sandin Phillipson
is a geologist who has visited several countries in Latin America and
Europe, and worked on various civil engineering and mining-related
projects in the U.S. and elsewhere. He has published in scientific
journals, but thought it would be fun to write about some of his travel
experiences on a more informal level. He has additional pictures and
geology items at his homepage,
http://sedward.home.netcom.com/petrography.html
sedward@ix.netcom.com
Article Source:
Ezine
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