| Deposit ID | 10310659 |
|---|---|
| Record type | Site |
| Current site name | Oneida Mine |
| Geographic coordinates: | -120.78812, 38.37349 (WGS84) |
|---|---|
| Elevation | 436 |
| Location accuracy | 100(meters) |
| Relative position | The Oneida Mine is located 1.5 miles northwest of Jackson, California |
Political divisions (FIPS codes)
Amador(county)
California(state)
United States(country)
North America(continent)
Land(continent)
USGS map quadrangles
Jackson(quadrangle 1:24,000 scale)
San Andreas(quadrangle 1:100,000 scale)
Sacramento(quadrangle 1:250,000 scale)
Hydrologic units (watersheds)
Upper Mokelumne(hydrologic unit)
San Joaquin(hydrologic accounting unit)
San Joaquin(hydrologic subregion)
California(hydrologic region)
| Country | State | County |
|---|---|---|
| United States | California | Amador |
| Meridian | Township | Range | Section | Fraction | State |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mount Diablo | 006N | 011E | 17 | C W/2 E/2 | California |
| Commodity | Importance |
|---|---|
| Gold | Primary |
| Silver | Secondary |
| Materials | Type of material |
|---|---|
| Gold | Ore |
| Pyrite | Ore |
| Arsenopyrite | Ore |
| Quartz | Gangue |
| Slate | Gangue |
| Model code | 273 |
|---|---|
| USGS model code | 36a |
| Deposit model name | Low-sulfide Au-quartz vein |
| Mark3 model number | 27 |
| Host or associated | Host | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Rock type | Metamorphic Rock > Metasedimentary Rock > Slate | ||
| Rock unit name | Mariposa Formation | ||
| |||
| Host or associated | Host | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Rock type | Metamorphic Rock > Metavolcanic Rock > Mafic Metamorphic Rock > Greenstone | ||
| Rock unit name | Mariposa Formation | ||
| |||
| (1) | -120.78812, 38.37349 |
|---|
| Type of structure | Local |
|---|---|
| Structure description | Melones Fault zone |
| Type of structure | Regional |
| Structure description | Bear Mountains Fault zone, Melones Fault zone |
| General form | Tabular, pinch and swell |
|---|
| Operation type | Underground |
|---|---|
| Development status | Past Producer |
| Commodity type | Metallic |
| Significant | Yes |
| Discovery year | 1860 |
| District name | Jackson-Plymouth |
|---|
| Ownership category | Private |
|---|---|
| Area name | Amador County Planning dept. |
Clark, W. B., 1970, Gold districts of California: California Divisions of Mines and Geology Bulletin 193, p. 69-76.
Carlson, D.W., and Clark, W.B., 1954, Mines and mineral resources of Amador County: California Division of Mines, California Journal of Mines and Geology, v. 50, p. 188.
Duffield, W.A. and Sharp, R.V., 1975, Geology of the Sierra foothills melange and adjacent areas, Amador County, California: U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 827, 30 p.
Irelan, W., Jr., 1888, El Dorado County, Church Mine: California State Mining Bureau, 8th Annual Report of the State Mineralogist, p. 79.
Logan, C.A., 1934, Mother Lode gold belt of California: California Division of Mines Bulletin 108, p. 111-112.
Schweickert, R.A., Hanson, R.E., and Girty, G.H., 1999, Accretionary tectonics of the Western Sierra Nevada Metamorphic Belt in Wagner, D.L. and Graham, S.A., editors, Geologic field trips in northern California: California Division of Mines and Geology Special Publication 119, p. 33-79.
Storms, W.H., 1900, The Mother Lode region of California: California Mining Bureau Bulletin 18, p 60-63.
Tucker, W.B., 1914, Amador County, Oneida Mine: California State Mining Bureau, 14th Annual Report of the State Mineralogist, p. 39.
Additional information on the Oneida Mine is available in file no. 332-5917 (CGS Mineral Resources Files, Sacramento).
Zimmerman, J.E., 1983, The Geology and structural evolution of a portion of the Mother Lode Belt, Amador County, California: unpublished M.S. thesis, University of Arizona, 138 p.
| Subject category | Comment text |
|---|---|
| Deposit | The Oneida Mine produced from typical Mother Lode type fracture filling mesothermal gold-quartz veins. The principal vein was the Oneida vein, striking N 27? E and dipping 65?east. The vein averaged 5 feet wide but thickened to as much as 20 feet. Ore is free milling gold in quartz with auriferous pyrite, arsenopyrite, and minor amounts of sphalerite and galena. Ore quality progressively declined with depth ranging from as high as $40 per ton in the upper workings to about $2 per ton near the mine's bottom of 2280 feet. |
| Type | Date | Name | Affiliation | Comment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Reporter | 01-JAN-2007 | Downey, Cameron (Higgins, Chris, T.) | California Geological Survey CGS (Formerly CDMG) | |
| 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.
These are landing pages for further research — the state agencies don't currently expose per-mine deep links.