| Deposit ID | 10310653 |
|---|---|
| Record type | Site |
| Current site name | Mount Gaines Mine |
| Alternate or previous names | Barfield, Frenchman, Bearfield |
| Geographic coordinates: | -120.17428, 37.54117 (WGS84) |
|---|---|
| Location accuracy | 100(meters) |
| Relative position | The Mount Gaines Mine is approximately 12 miles west-northwest of the town of Mariposa. |
Political divisions (FIPS codes)
Mariposa(county)
California(state)
United States(country)
North America(continent)
Land(continent)
USGS map quadrangles
Hornitos(quadrangle 1:24,000 scale)
Oakdale(quadrangle 1:100,000 scale)
San Jose(quadrangle 1:250,000 scale)
Hydrologic units (watersheds)
Fresno River(hydrologic unit)
San Joaquin(hydrologic accounting unit)
San Joaquin(hydrologic subregion)
California(hydrologic region)
Federal lands
Bureau of Land Management(Bureau of Land Management CA)
Bureau of Land Management CA BLM(Type of land area)
BLM(Federal land areas administered by BLM)
| Country | State | County |
|---|---|---|
| United States | California | Mariposa |
| Meridian | Township | Range | Section | Fraction | State |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mount Diablo | 004S | 016E | 35 | SE | California |
| Commodity | Importance |
|---|---|
| Gold | Primary |
| Silver | Secondary |
| Copper | Secondary |
| Lead | Secondary |
| Materials | Type of material |
|---|---|
| Gold | Ore |
| Galena | Ore |
| Sphalerite | Ore |
| Chalcopyrite | Ore |
| Pyrite | Ore |
| Arsenopyrite | Ore |
| Barite | Ore |
| Proustite | Ore |
| Argentite | Ore |
| Quartz | 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 > Metavolcanic Rock > Mafic Metamorphic Rock > Greenstone | ||
| Rock unit name | Penon Blanco Volcanics | ||
| |||
| Host or associated | Host | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Rock type | Metamorphic Rock > Metasedimentary Rock > Slate | ||
| Rock unit name | Mariposa Formation | ||
| |||
| (1) | -120.17428, 37.54117 |
|---|
| Type of structure | Regional |
|---|---|
| Structure description | Bear Mountains Fault Zone |
| General form | Tabular |
|---|
| Operation type | Underground |
|---|---|
| Development status | Past Producer |
| Commodity type | Metallic |
| Deposit size | Small |
| Significant | Yes |
| Discovery year | 1868 |
| District name | Hornitos District |
|---|
Bowen, O.E., Jr. and Gray, C.H., Jr., 1957, Mines and mineral resources of Mariposa County, California: California Journal of Mines and Geology, v. 53, nos. 1-2, p. 35-343.
Castello, W.O., 1921, Mariposa County: California State Mining Bureau, 17th Annual Report of the State Mineralogist, p. 86-143.
Clark, W. B., 1970, Gold districts of California: California Division of Mines and Geology Bulletin 193, p. 65-66.
Clark. W. B., and Lydon, P.A., 1962, Mines and mineral resources of Calaveras County, California: California Division of Mines and Geology County Report No. 2, p. 72-73.
Earhart, R.L., 1988, Geologic setting of gold occurrences in the Big Canyon area, El Dorado County, California: U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 1576, 13 p.
Julihn, C.E., and Horton, F.W., 1940, Mineral industries survey of the United States - Mines of the southern Mother Lode Region, Part II - Tuolumne and Mariposa counties: U.S. Bureau of Mines Bulletin 424, 179 p.
Knopf, A., 1929, The Mother Lode system of California: U. S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 157, 88 p.
Koschmann, A.H., and Bergendahl, M.H., 1968, Principal gold-producing districts of the United States: U. S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 610, 283 p.
Logan, C.A., 1935, Mother Lode gold belt of California: California Division of Mines Bulletin 108, 240 p.
Metals Economics Group, 1983, The MineSearch annual: California, Oregon, and Washington, vol. VIII, 636 p.
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.
Wagner, D.L., Bortugno, E.J., and McJunkin, R.D., 1990, Geologic map of the San Francisco-San Jose Quadrangle, California: California Department of Conservation, Division of Mines and Geology Regional Geologic Map Series, Map No. 5A, scale 1:250,000.
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 deposit at the Mount Gaines Mine consists of a typical gold- and sulfide-bearing hydrothermal quartz-vein system within metamorphic rock. The vein system is not well-defined at the surface. Much of the early work on the vein system was done on shallow pockets and stringers of sulfide-bearing quartz; the main branch of the system was discovered at depth. In the main vein, which is sinuous, the best ore tends to be concentrated on the east sides of arcuate irregularities, particularly along the parts of the vein that have the gentlest dip. Ore shoots vary from 40 to 450 feet long. The main vein strikes about N35E and dips at an average of 20SE; the relatively shallow dip of the vein is notable. The vein system has a known length of about 9,000 feet. It varies from a few inches to more than 15 feet wide, with an average of about 5 feet. Vein matter is chiefly milky quartz, but some ore is present in quartz veinlets in fractured, slaty to chloritic greenstone along the footwall. Ore shoots contain about 3-4% sulfides. Ore minerals include native gold, galena, sphalerite, chalcopyrite, pyrite, arsenopyrite, barite, proustite, and argentite. Native gold is observable in fractures in the pyrite. Wall rocks are chiefly massive pyroxene-andesite greenstone of Jurassic age with minor slate and hornfelsic metasedimentary rocks. Shearing and hydrothermal alteration along the vein caused widespread development of schistose to slaty chloritic material, particularly on the footwall side of the vein. A dike is present along the hanging wall of the vein against which the best ore in the mine was generally found; as of 1940, no ore had been found above the dike. Most ore was mined from the hanging wall beneath the dike. |
| Type | Date | Name | Affiliation | Comment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Reporter | 19-FEB-2007 | 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.
| Status | Active since 10/25/2015 |
|---|---|
| MSHA mine ID | 0404794 |
| Mine name (MSHA) | MT. GAINES MINE |
| Current operator | Mt Gaines Rock |
| Current controller (parent) | Jack Bankhead |
| Mine type | Surface (Metal / non-metal) |
Inferred by coordinate + name similarity (902 m, 0.86 match). Confirm against MSHA if precision matters — non-USGS-curated cross-references may occasionally point at a neighbouring mine.
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