THE VANDERBILT DISTRICT.
Forty-five miles from Fenner, on the line of the A. & P. R. R., in the eastern part of the county, near the Nevada State line, is the Vanderbilt District. It lies between Palm District and Ivanpah, at an elevation of 6,000 feet above the sea. Numerous claims have been located on the veins of the district and considerable development done. Messrs. Patton, Taggert & Hall own eight promising claims, which it is their purpose to develop extensively. A shaft 4½ by 6½ feet has been sunk on the vein to a depth of 60 feet, besides which a number of shafts of lesser depth and numerous open cuts have been made, all exposing ore of good grade. The vein is of the branching kind. The veins vary from 5 to 30 feet in width, striking east and west, with a dip to the north of 60°. The gangue is quartz, honey-combed at the surface from the oxidation of the sulphurets it originally contained, small disseminated crystals of which (iron, lead, and copper) begin to show in the rock from the deepest parts of the workings. Some of the rock contains a high percentage of lead in the form of galena and carbonate, but it occurs mostly in bunches and is not evenly distributed through the rock. A shipment of 6,963 pounds to the sampling works at Kingman, Arizona, returned an average assay value of $173 50 per ton, most of which was gold. Another lot averaged $44.
Near the above described property Messrs. Simmons & Roberts have sunk three shafts to a depth of 40 feet each, and Campbell & Beatty put down a shaft 100 feet, all in ore of a character and value similar to that found in the other mines. Both wood and water are obtainable in the district, pine timber growing on the hills, and a good stream of water is flowing down into the desert only 1¼ miles distant from these mines. With the character and grade of the ores found in these veins, and the advantages of wood and water, it would seem that these mines might be successfully operated, particularly as some of the owners are possessed of sufficient means. It is the expressed intention, however, to sink deeper and determine more fully the extent and character of the ore in depth before placing expensive machinery on the ground.
THE IBEX MINE.
Among the mines that have attracted unusual attention in this county during the past year, the Ibex Mine stands prominently in the front rank. It is located 3½ miles from Ibex Station, on the line of the A. & P. R. R., and not over 11 miles north from The Needles. The Ibex property is in the Ibex Mining District, and consists of seven claims, which were located in 1888, now owned by residents of Riverside and San Bernardino. The principal claim is called the Ibex. The vein strikes east and west, dipping at an angle of 45°. Two shafts, one 60 feet and one 52 feet, had been sunk at the time this information was obtained. At the bottom of the 52-foot shaft a drift 38 feet in length has been run on the vein. Surface cuts and trenches are quite numerous on the several claims, and a large amount of quartz containing gold had been exposed. Free gold could be seen in considerable quantity in some of the porous quartz. The quartz is thoroughly crystalline, showing many cavities as a result of the decomposition and leaching out of the sulphuretted minerals it originally contained. These cavities are all lined with minute quartz crystals, which have been deposited evidently since the removal of the sulphides. Rock of this description is full of gold, seemingly. It is so loose in texture that careless handling shakes out the golden grains. John Anderson, of San Bernardino, one of the owners, volunteered the information that from 2 to 4 feet of this rock sampled $100 to $150 per ton. The owners had determined the latter part of April to ship this free-milling ore to The Needles, where a mill was being constructed. Some of the quartz from the lowest workings contains small crystals of pyrite and chalcopyrite, but it would still be classed as an ore susceptible of free amalgamation. The Ibex property had a promising look in the spring of 1892. Its further development will be looked to with great interest by all interested in desert mines.