The Oro Grande Mining District is located immediately east of the Southern California Railroad, at the town of Oro Grande. It is commonly supposed to embrace all the mines for some miles around, though, in fact each group of mines or hills has been given a separate name, but as these so-called districts are mostly without organization, all the claims and mines will be considered under one head.

The geology of the district about Oro Grande is complex, the formations being uplifted, greatly faulted, and broken, besides the intrusion of dikes of felsitic rock, diorite, and quartz porphyry. I had not sufficient time at my disposal when at Oro Grande to study out the somewhat intricate geological problem, and will describe the region in general terms.

Commencing at the town of Oro Grande, which stands on the bank of the Mojave River, the country rises in a gentle slope toward the hill half a mile distant; gently rolling hills are reached, which in turn give place to more rugged masses, and finally to a rough mountainous area, the hillsides being almost precipitous. The lowlying country about the base of the hills is mostly made up of schistose micaceous rocks, a quartzose mica schist predominating. The first hills of any consequence are eruptive, mostly a light-greenish felsite and a coarse-grained porphyritic rock. Beyond are prominent hills of a dense, hard quartzite resting upon a crystalline limestone, the highest hills being made up of practically the same materials (quartzite and limestone), in part schistose with some mica schist, jasper, and many intrusive dikes of all the previously mentioned eruptives, prominent among them being diorite of dark-green color.

THE EMBODY MINE.

Within half a mile of the town, and on a lower spur or ridge that makes down from the hills, is located the Embody Mine, which, during the excitement at this locality in 1890, attracted considerable attention. The gold-bearing material is quartzose, micaceous rock of somewhat friable character. The deposit, as I may term it, has the appearance of being an impregnation without definite form.

Were it not for the fact that the shoot of gold rock makes across the strike of the schists, it would resemble some bedded deposits found at the Homestake, Black Hills, South Dakota, where micaceous schists have been silicified and hornblende schists metamorphosed to chloritic schists, the whole carrying gold across a broad zone 1,600 feet in width and 6,000 feet in length. The gold occurs in shoots or vein-like zones, without defining lines of any character. At the Embody Mine, too, little development has been done to make any positive prediction as to the future of the mine. The formation strikes northeast and southwest, and dips 70° southeast.

The country is somewhat broken up, but no considerable masses of shattered rock were observed. The croppings are quite heavily stained with iron oxides of brown and red shades, and this mineralization can be traced some distance. Two shafts, one nearly 100 feet deep, the other about 30 feet, have been sunk on the deposit, exposing rocks of uniform character, all carrying some gold. The width of the gold-bearing zone is undetermined, but it is thought to be from 6 to 20 feet.

As far as I learned, a “mill-run” had never been made on the rock from this mine. Mining operations had been stopped and the property involved in some sort of dispute. The value of the rock was given to me as $8 or $10 per ton.

THE CARBONATE MINE.

The principal mine of this district, and the one which gave the camp its fame, is the Carbonate Mine. It was discovered by a man named Collins, who was working in a lime quarry near by. Collins found croppings of ore—limonite and manganese—containing silver. He developed the property somewhat, but it finally passed into other hands, and is now owned by a Los Angeles company, which has opened the mine quite extensively.