| Deposit ID | 10310361 |
|---|---|
| Record type | Site |
| Current site name | Manhattan Gold Mine |
| Alternate or previous names | Big Four Mine, Reilly Mine, Big Pine Mine, Little Grey Mine, East Pit, West Pit |
| Related records | 10044292 |
| Geographic coordinates: | -117.0562, 38.53132 (WGS84) |
|---|---|
| Elevation | 2150 |
| Relative position | The Manhattan gold mine is s located in the central part of the Manhattan mining district about 12 miles south of Round Mountain, 40 miles northeast of Tonopah, on the western flank of the Toquima Range |
Political divisions (FIPS codes)
Nye(county)
Nevada(state)
United States(country)
North America(continent)
Land(continent)
USGS map quadrangles
Manhattan(quadrangle 1:24,000 scale)
Ione Valley(quadrangle 1:100,000 scale)
Tonopah(quadrangle 1:250,000 scale)
Hydrologic units (watersheds)
Southern Big Smoky Valley(hydrologic unit)
Central Nevada Desert Basins(hydrologic accounting unit)
Central Nevada Desert Basins(hydrologic subregion)
Great Basin(hydrologic region)
| Country | State | County |
|---|---|---|
| United States | Nevada | Nye |
| Meridian | Township | Range | Section | Fraction | State |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mount Diablo | 008N | 044E | 19 20 21 | Nevada |
| Commodity | Importance |
|---|---|
| Silver | Primary |
| Gold | Primary |
| Antimony Critical | Tertiary |
| Arsenic Critical | Tertiary |
| Fluorine-Fluorite Critical | Tertiary |
| Materials | Type of material |
|---|---|
| Gold | Ore |
| Silver | Ore |
| Stibnite | Ore |
| Arsenopyrite | Ore |
| Realgar | Ore |
| Fluorite | Ore |
| Quartz | Ore |
| Adularia | Ore |
| Pyrite | Ore |
| Clay | Ore |
| Fluorite | Ore |
| Barite | Ore |
| Calcite | Gangue |
| Model code | 150 |
|---|---|
| USGS model code | 25c |
| Deposit model name | Epithermal vein, Comstock |
| Mark3 model number | 16 |
| Host or associated | Host | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rock type | Metamorphic Rock > Phyllite | ||||
| Rock type qualifier | sandy | ||||
| Rock unit name | Gold Hill Formation | ||||
| |||||
| Host or associated | Host | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Rock type | Sedimentary Rock > Carbonate > Limestone | ||
| Rock unit name | White Caps Limestone | ||
| |||
| Host or associated | Associated | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rock type | Metamorphic Rock > Schist | ||||
| Rock unit name | Gold Hill Formation | ||||
| |||||
| Host or associated | Associated | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rock type | Metamorphic Rock > Metasedimentary Rock > Quartzite | ||||
| Rock unit name | Gold Hill Formation | ||||
| |||||
| (1) | -117.0562, 38.53132 |
|---|
| Type of structure | Regional |
|---|---|
| Structure description | A series of thrust sheets that generally dip to the south have affected rocks in the mine area. The Manhattan gold deposit occurs within a NW-trending, NW-plunging faulted antiform. |
| Type of structure | Local |
| Structure description | Reilly Fault (ENE), Jumping Jack Fault (NE), Twin Faults (ENE), Big Pine Fault (ENE), and joints associated with the Brugher Fault trend (NE), joints associated with the Little Grey Fault trend (NW), Little Grey Cross Fault (E-W) and joints associated with other unnamed fault trends, all cut through the mine area. |
| General form | Tabular to irregular |
|---|
| Operation type | Surface-Underground |
|---|---|
| Development status | Past Producer |
| Commodity type | Both |
| Deposit size | Small |
| Significant | Yes |
| Discovery year | 1868 |
| Year of first production | 1868 |
| Year of last production | 1993 |
| Production years | 1860s; 1905-1947; 1973-1993 |
| District name | Manhattan District |
|---|
| Ownership category | National Forest |
|---|---|
| Area name | Tonopah USFS Ranger District |
| Ownership category | BLM Administrative Area |
| Area name | Tonopah BLM field station |
| Ownership category | Private |
| Type | Owner |
|---|---|
| Owner | Smoky Valley Common Operation |
| Year | 2004 |
| Type | Operator |
|---|---|
| Owner | Round Mountain Gold Corporation |
| Year | 2004 |
Kral, V.E., 1951, Mineral Resources of Nye Co.: Nev. Bur. of Mines and Geol., Bull. 50, p. 125
Ferguson, H.G., 1924, Geol. and ore deposits of the Manhattan District: USGS Bull 723, p. 151-153.
NBMG, MI-1993-MI-2004.
Maddry and others, 1987, Geology of the Manhattan Gold deposit Nye County, Nevada, in Bulk Mineable Precious Metal Deposits of the Western US, GSN Symposium Proceedings.
| Subject category | Comment text |
|---|---|
| Deposit | In the main mined area, gold occurs in drusy quartz-adularia veinlets in brittle, fractured, faulted sandy phyllite of the Gold Hill Formation. Native gold is coarse-grained (.04-10 mm) and occurs on fractures as discrete free crystals and masses. Both the East and West Pit orebodies are characterized by a coarse stockwork of fractures lined by gangue minerals and free gold. Frctures generally range in thickness from 0.16 to 1.3 cm. At the historic Nevada Manhattan/Nevada Consolidated Mine workings, mineralization is localized along the Mud Fault. Ore is controlled by a small north-striking fault in the east part of the mine, and by small fault fissures in the west part of the mine. Gold occurs in solution channels forming rare specks of wire in a muddy matrix of iron and manganese oxides (western part). There is also some replacement along bedding, thinning out away from fissures. |
| Type | Date | Name | Affiliation | Comment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Reporter | 01-NOV-2005 | LaPointe, D.D. | Nevada Bureau of Mines and Geology | |
| Editor | 01-SEP-2007 | Schruben, Paul G. | U.S. Geological Survey | Converted from S&A FileMaker format to Oracle. Edit checks on rocks, units, and ages with Geolex search, and other fields. |
Supplemental information added by qvyshift.com. Not part of the original USGS MRDS record.
| Status | Intermittent since 09/12/2024 |
|---|---|
| MSHA mine ID | 2602658 |
| Mine name (MSHA) | Manhattan Gulch |
| Current operator | Manhattan Gulch, LLC |
| Current controller (parent) | Manhattan Gulch Partners LLC |
| Mine type | Surface (Metal / non-metal) |
Inferred by coordinate + name similarity (1818 m, 0.83 match). Confirm against MSHA if precision matters — non-USGS-curated cross-references may occasionally point at a neighbouring mine.
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