THE GLADSTONE GOLD MINE.

Less than a mile from the Tiptop, in a northwestern direction, is another property, the Gladstone, locally known as Halberg’s Gold Mine. It was located several years ago, and after some development was practically abandoned, but afterwards came into the hands of the present owners, who have developed the ground quite extensively, built a long tramway and ore bins, and established a camp.

Nothing was being done at the time of my visit. The mine is something of a curiosity geologically and mineralogically. The ore body, for there is only one of any consequence developed, occurs in the gray quartz porphyry common to the region. A fault has also occurred here, fracturing the country rock in a manner similar to that in the Tiptop, excepting that here there is but a single, simple fault. The ore body consists of a mass of crushed and broken country rock, portions of which still show distinctly the original porphyritic structure. Generally speaking, however, the original rock has undergone an extreme metamorphosis, resulting, in most cases, in more or less complete mineralogical and physical changes. The porphyry has, by gradual replacement, been changed to solid ore, or been silicified to a dense quartzose, sometimes jaspery, rock. Kaolinization of the feldspars has also taken place. As to the origin of these deposits there seems to be little reason to doubt that the ore was deposited by percolating waters, which derived their contents from the neighboring eruptive rocks. These solutions were carried into the fault plane, and reaching the great chamber or crushed mass, found conditions of a superior nature for the precipitation of the minerals they contained. In the pulverized or finely crushed portions the ore deposition has been most complete, entirely replacing the original rock, while in the brecciated portions the ore occurs as incrustations, filling the smaller interstices, but sometimes penetrating the rock fragments themselves.

The ore body is something over 200 feet in length and 30 feet or more in width at the Widest part, but thinning out rather irregularly toward the ends and also downward.

Doubtless it at one time extended some distance upward, but that portion has been eroded. Along the plane of the fault the line of demarkation between ore and porphyry is very distinct, as the two bear not the slightest resemblance, but at the outer edges of the deposit no such line can be discovered. The mineral gradually disappears, leaving only a brecciated mass of whitish rock, which graduates into the normal porphyry. The brecciated condition of the mass is made more plain by the variety of color assumed by the angular fragments. They are various shades of green, red, white, and brown, or yellow, caused by copper carbonates and iron oxides.

Though the original condition of the ore was doubtless sulphide, it now contains, as the result of oxidation, hematite, limonite, magnetite, malachite, azurite, chrysocolla, cerussite, wulfenite, chloride of silver, manganese oxide, and metallic gold. The value of the ore lies principally in the gold contained, though in one portion of the ore body, near its eastern end, rich chloride of silver ore is found, with but little gold. The physical appearance of the ore is no criterion of its gold contents, as two pieces, with identically the same characteristics, will differ widely in value. One may contain $2 or $3 in gold, the other several hundred. Should ever a mill be erected in the district, this ore can be worked to a profit, though this single ore body will alone scarcely justify the construction of a mill.

On the south side of this fissure or slip is a vein which runs nearly parallel with the chambered vein above described. This vein can be traced for several thousand feet. In character the ore is similar to that found in the Imperial lode. Assays running over $200 in gold have been obtained from this ore, and $50 assays are not uncommon. The vein is quite small, ranging from a mere seam to 2 feet. Scarcely any development has been done on this vein, though it promises better results than the large “vein chamber.”

The developments on the Gladstone consist of a shaft 60 feet deep. The first level is cut at a depth of 30 feet from the surface, where drifts have been run for a distance of 30 feet each way from the shaft, on the course of the vein, and a crosscut, 28 feet north. East of this, a 15-foot shaft has been sunk in a good sized cut. A large open cut, 100 feet long, has exposed the upper portion of the ore deposit perfectly. Other superficial work has been done at various points along the vein. A tramway of 1,700 feet has been constructed from the mine to the bottom of an adjacent cañon.

OTHER CLAIMS.

In the vicinity of the mines described in this district are numerous other claims, some of them having considerable development, but all lying idle at the time of my visit. One claim has an 80-foot tunnel, and shows some lead and silver ore of good grade. This claim is patented.