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Volume 035-3 - July 1981 (8 pages)

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Page: of 8

with sides 4 inches in height, having a
sheet iron bottom perforated with half
inch holes. On the bottom of the box
were fastened two rockers like those on
the baby cradle, and the whole had a
piece of board or other solid foundation
to stand on, the whole being set at an
angle to allow the gravel to work off at
the lower end with the water. A cleat
was fastened across the bottom to catch
the gold, and this was frequently
examined to see how the work was
paying, and taking out such coarse
pieces as could be readily seen. To work
the rocker a pan of dirt was placed in
the square screen box and then with one
hand the miner rocked the cradle while
he poured water with the other from a
dipper to wash the earth. After he had
poured on enough water and shaken the
box sufficiently to pass all the small
stuff through, he stirred over what
remained in the screen box, examining
carefully for a nugget too large to pass
through the half inch holes. If the miner
found that the dirt did not pay, he took
his rocker on his back and went on in
search of a better claim.
Another way to work the dirt was to
get a small head of water running ina
ditch, and then run the water and
gravel through a series of boxes a foot
square and twelve feet long, using from
one to ten boxes as circumstances
seemed to indicate. At the lower end of
these boxes was placed the “‘long tom”
which was about two feet wide at the
lower end, and six inches high at the
same point. The side pieces extended
out about 3 feet longer than the wooden
bottom, and were turned up to a point,
some like a sled runner, and this turned
up part had a bottom of sheet iron
punched full of holes, the size of the
sheet iron being about 3 feet by 16
inches.
The miners shoveled dirt into the
upper end of the boxes slowly, and
regulated the water so that it dissolved
the lumps and chunks very thoroughly
before it reached the long tom where a
man stood who stirred the gravel over,
and if nothing yellow was seen, threw
the washed gravel away, and let the
rest go through the screen. Immediately below this screen was placed
what is called a “riffle box’”’, two by four
feet in size with bars 4 inches across the
bottom and sides, and this box was set
at a proper angle. Now when the water
came through the screen it fell
perpendicularly in this box with force
enough to keep the contents continually
in motion, and as the gold is much
heavier than any other mineral likely
to be found in the dirt, it settled to the
bottom, and all lighter stuff was carried
away with the water. The gold would be
found behind the bars in the riffle box.
These methods of working were
very crude, and we gradually became
aware that the finest dust was not
saved, and many improvements were
brought into use. In my own mine, the
tailings that we let go down the
mountain side would lodge in large
W C.BVTLER $C. 6-F
piles in different places, and after lying
a year, more gold could be washed out of
it than was at first obtained, and some
of it coarser, so that it was plainly seen
that a better way of working would be
more profitable. There was plenty of
ground, called poor ground, that had
much gold in it but could not profitably
be worked with the rocker and long
tom. The bed rock was nearly level and
as the land had a gradual rise, the banks
kept getting higher and higher as they
dug farther in. Now it was really good
ground only down close to the bed rock,
but all the dirt had some gold init, and if
a way could be invented to work it fast
enough, such ground would pay. So the
plan of hydraulic mining was
experimented upon.
The water was brought in a ditch or
flume to the top of a high bank, and then
terminated in a tight box. To this box
was attached a large hose made by hand
out of canvas, and a pipe and nozzle
attached to the lower end of the hose.
Now as the bank was often 100 feet or
more high, the water at this head, when
directed through the nozzle against the
bank, fairly melted it away into liquid
mud. Imagine us located a mile above
the river on the side of the mountain. We
dug at first sluices in the rock to carry
off the mud and water, and after it had
flowed in these a little way a sluice box
was put in to pass it through. These
were made on a slope of one in twelve,
and the bottom paved with blocks, 3
inches thick, so laid as to make a cavity
or pocket at the corner of the blocks.
After passing the first sluice box the
water and gravel was run into a bed
rock sluice again, and then into another
sluice box and so on for a mile, passing
through several sluice boxes on the
way. Quicksilver was placed in the
upper sluice boxes, and when the
particles of gold were polished up by
tumbling about in the gravel, they
combined with the quicksilver, making
an amalgam.
The most gold would be left in the
first sluice boxes, but some would go on
down to the very last, where the water
and dirt were run into the river. They
cleaned up the first sluices every week,
those a little farther on every month,
while the lower ones would only be
cleaned up at the end of the season.
In cleaning up, the blocks were
taken out of the boxes, and every little
crevice or pocket in the whole length of
the sluice cleaned out, from the bottom
to the top, using little hooks and iron
spoons, made for the purpose.
The amalgam thus collected was
heated in a retort which expelled the
quicksilver as vapor, which was
condensed and used again. When they
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