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| Extremely Rich 145.71 Acre Tertiary Gravels Gold Claim |
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item description

 

Please Scroll To The Right Margin To See More Bigger Pictures, Thanks
General Claim Description
We are proud to offer this unbelievable and extremely rich unpatented placer gold mining claim totaling 145.71 Acres in Nevada County, California. This claim is located in the heart of the Moore's Flat near the small old mining town of North Columbia where hydraulic mining once flourished. A total of 25 million yards were mined at Moore's Flat. I estimate 3 million yards still remain intact on this claim. Many huge gold nuggets and large pockets were discovered here. The prosperous Alleghany District to the north adjoins Moore's Flat and Malakoff Diggins adjoins to the south. If your looking for an isolated area perfect for metal detecting or to start up a nice trommel operation, decorative rock quarry, look no further! Good access is provided off Short Road by two wheel or four wheel drive vehicles, motorhomes & travel trailers. There is also nice gravel and dirt roads throughout this claim with nice flat camp areas in several locations. The name of the claim is Eureka Placer #76 & #77 extension. This claim is located 4 miles east of North Columbia. The gold is produced from numerous rich eroding quartz veins protruding into the area and the main fork of the tertiary Blue Lead Yuba channel. This channel has been the main producer of placer gold in California and runs in a northerly direction directly through this claim. The terrain on this claim is flat to rolling with very sparsely wooded forest.
Please take note this is not a down payment, percentage, or share auction, high bidder takes this wonderfull claim. Feel free to sample this incredible claim. Thanks!!


Claim Specifics
Eureka Placer #76 & 77 Extension
Section 15, Township 18N, Range 10E, Mount Diablo Meridian, Lot 10, 11 & W 1/2 Of The Nw 1/4
145.71 Acres
Please See Map Below For Precise GPS Coordinates

GPS Coordinates
NW Corner 39 Degrees 25.813N By 120 Degrees 51.012W Elevation 3992
SW Corner 39 Degrees 25.417N By 120 Degrees 51.024W Elevation 3956
NE Corner 39 Degrees 25.863N By 120 Degrees 50.468W Elevation 3890
SE Corner 39 Degrees 25.479N By 120 Degrees 50.468W Elevation 3882

Driving Directions
From Nevada City take Highway 49 north towards Downieville. Before arriving in North San Juan turn right on Tyler Foote Road. Stay on Tyler Foote Road approx. 9 miles. Stay left at the fork on North Bloomfield Graniteville Road. Continue on North Bloomfiled Graniteville Road approx. 5 miles and turn left on Moore's Flat Road. Stay on Moore's Flat Road for approx. 4 1/2 miles and turn left on Short Road. Go approx 1.39 miles down short road and you will be at the south boundary of the claim. From this point the claim goes 1/2 mile north and half a mile west. Feel free to explore the different roads and areas on these claims. Please call if you have any problems finding this location.
Feel free to go sample this gorgeous claim and find some color before auctions end, Thanks!!
Access
Accessible off Short Road via Moore's Flat Road by 4 wheel & two wheel drive vehicles, rv's, travel trailers, motorhomes, even cars. There are also numerous dirt roads to access the claim in different locations as well.
Feel free to sample this amazing claim, you'll find color!!!

Gold Districts of California
ALLEGHANY
Location. Alleghany is in southwestern Sierra County. This district is in a belt of gold mineralization that extends from Goodyear's Bar, south and southeast through Forest, Alleghany, Chip's Flat, and Minnesota. This gold-bearing belt continues south to the Washington district in Nevada County. The Downieville and American Hill districts are to the east, and the Pike district is to the west.
History. The streams in the area were placer-mined soon after the beginning of the gold rush, and the Forest diggings were discovered in the summer of 1852 by some sailors. Some of these sailors were "Kanakas" or Hawaiians who also had deserted their ships in San Francisco. Forest, first known as Brownsville and then Elizaville, got its present name in 1853. The Bald Mountain and other drift mines were highly productive from then until around 1885. Hydraulic mining was done at Minnesota and Chip's Flat during these years. The town of Alleghany was named for Alleghany, Pennsylvania.
Quartz mining was reported to have begun in the district in 1853 at the German Bar and Irelan mines. Although the quartz mines were moderately productive until the 1870s, drift mining was the principal source of gold then. The rediscovery of the Tightner vein in 1904 by H. F. Johnson (erroneously given as 1907 in many reports) led to the revival of lode mining, which continued until 1965.
Alleghany was the only town in California after World War II where gold mining was the principal segment of the economy. After 1960, production from the district, which had been averaging more than $500,000 per year, decreased greatly as more and more mining operations were curtailed. By 1963, the output was less than $100,000 per year. The Sixteen-to-One mine, the largest gold source in the district, curtailed normal operations late in 1962, and the Brush Creek mine, the second largest operation, was shut down in 1964. At the end of 1965 the Sixteen-to-One mine was completely shut down, ending an operation that had lasted more than 60 years. (Editor's note: the Sixteen-to-One mine is again in operation as of 1998.) Intermittent operations have continued at several mines, such as the Kate Hardy, Oriental, El Dorado-Plumbago, and Mugwump mines. Several of the mines received Federal exploration loans. Skin divers are active in the streams of the area.
Alleghany was the most famous high-grade gold mining district in California. The value of the total output is unknown, estimated at $50 million. Much of this production was from small but spectacularly rich ore bodies.
Geology. The district is underlain by north and northwest-trending beds of metamorphic rocks of the Calaveras Formation (Carboniferous to Permian), serpentine, and greenstone. In the vicinity of Alleghany and Forest this formation has been divided into six units: Blue Canyon Slate, Tightner Formation (chiefly amphibolite and chlorite schist), Kanka Formation (conglomerate, chert, and slate), Relief Quartzite, Cape Horn Slate, and the Delhi Formation (phyllite and slate). These rocks have been invaded by many basic and ultra-basic intrusions; the ultra-basic rocks have been largely serpentinized. Mariposite-bearing rock, locally known as "bluejay," is commonly adjacent to the serpentine. Also present are fine to medium-grained dioritic dikes. The higher ridges are capped by andesite and basalt, which in places overlies auriferous Tertiary channel gravels.
Ore deposits. The gold-quartz veins strike in a northerly direction, dip either east or west, and usually range from two to five feet in thickness. They occupy minor reverse faults, and occur in all of the rocks of the Calaveras Formation, and in the greenstone. The largest number of mines are in amphibolites of the Tightner Formation. The most characteristic features of the ore deposits are the extreme richness, erratic distribution and small size of the ore shoots. Th range from small masses of gold and quartz yielding a few hundred dollars to ore bodies that have yielded hundreds of thousands of dollars. One ore body at the Sixteen-to-One mine, which had a pitch length of 40 feet, contained nearly $1 million, while another at the Oriental mine about 14 feet long yielded $734,000.
The gold occurs in the native state commonly with arsenopyrite but only small amounts of other sulfides. In a few places pyrite is abundant. The numerous serpentine bodies and associated mariposite rock are structurally important in the localization of the ore bodies. The quartz veins tend to fray or bend near serpentine, and it is in these frayed or bend portions of the veins that the high-grade ore bodies are often found. High-grade ore also is found in vein junctions or in sheared portions of the veins.
Channel gravels. A major tributary of the Tertiary Yuba River extended south from Rock Creek through Forest and Alleghany and then southeast through Chip's Flat and Minnesota to Moore's Flat in Nevada County. This is commonly known as the "Great Blue Lead" or Forest channel. It was uniformly rich except where cut by later channels. The largest gold producers were the Ruby, Live Yankee, and Bald Mountain drift mines, where many coarse nuggets were recovered. During the late 1930s a number of fist-sized gold nuggets were recovered from the Ruby mine. These were displayed for many years in the Sierra County exhibit at the California State Fair in Sacramento.
Mines. Lode: Brush Creek $4 million+, Dreadnaught $50,000 to $100,000, Docile $100,000 to $200,000, Eclipse $20,000 to $50,000, El Dorado $325,000, German Bar $200,000, Gold Canyon $750,000 to $1 million, Gold Crown, Golden King $250,000, Irelan $350,000 to $500,000, Kate Hardy $700,000, Kenton $1 million to $1.25 million, Mariposa $50,000, Morning Glory $80,000 to $100,000, Mugwump (both lode and placer) $50,000, North Fork (both lode and placer) $125,000, Oriflamme, Ophir, Oriental $2.85 million, Osceola, Plumbago $3.5 million, Rainbow $2.5 million, Rainbow Extension, Red Ledge, Red StarOsceola- $200,000, Rising Sun $58,000, Shannon, Sixteen-to-One $25 million+, South Fork (both lode and placer), Spoohn, Tightner, Twenty One, Wyoming, Yellowjacket. Drift: Bald Mountain $3.1 million, Bald Mountain Extension $500,000 to $1 million, Gold Star $250,000+, Highland & Masonic $300,000+, Live Yankee $750,000 to $1 million, Ruby $1 million+.
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Intoduction
Between 1848 and 1967, California was the source of more than 106 million troy ounces of gold. This total was far greater than that for any other state in the Union and represented about 35 percent of the total United States production.
Although gold was mined in California in the late 18th and early 19th Centuries, the gold rush did not begin until after Marshall's discovery at Sutter's Mill in 1848. Thousands of gold seekers soon arrived, and in a few years much of the state was permanently settled. Gold production attained an all-time high of $81 million in 1852 but then declined because of the exhaustion of the rich surface placers. At the last government-set price of $35 per ounce, the 1852 amount would have been about $138 million.
Hydraulic mines become the largest sources of gold until curtailed by court order in 1884. Lode mines and dredges were the principal sources after that date. During the depression years of the 1930s, gold output in the state was nearly as high as it had been during the gold rush. Gold mining was curtailed during World War II and has not recovered since. A number of spectacular nuggets and masses of pure gold were recovered in California during the early days. The most famous were the 195-pound mass of gold from Carson Hill and the 54-pound Willard nugget from Magalia. Small high-grade ore shoots or pockets have been found in many districts, but the richest and most numerous have been in the Allegany district of Sierra County.
WHERE GOLD WAS FOUND
Although gold is found in many areas in California, the most productive districts are in the northern and central portions of the Sierra Nevada. The primary deposits usually consist of gold-quartz veins in metamorphic rocks and are associated with the intrusion of the Sierra Nevada batholith.
In the Klamath Mountains, the second most-productive province, the largest sources of gold have been the streams of the Klamath-Trinity River system. The older terrace deposits along the sides of the present stream channels also have yielded much gold and were mined by hydraulicking.
The Basin Ranges and Mojave Desert provinces of eastern and southern California have yielded substantial amounts of gold. The gold occurs either in epithermal deposits in brecciated silicified zones of Tertiary volcanic rocks or in mesothermal quartz veins of older metamorphic and granitic rocks. Gold also has been recovered from dry placers in several districts.
Moderate amounts of gold have been mined in the Transverse and Peninsular Ranges in southern California. The mineral also has been recovered from the Modoc Plateau province in northeastern California. Small amounts of gold have been produced in a number of places in the Coast Ranges.
THE MINES TODAY
California's gold-mining history is a brilliant lure, and many books, pamphlets, periodicals and articles have been published on the subject. The old mining districts and settlements, including "ghost" towns, are visited by increasing numbers of tourists each year. In a few districts the old camps have been reconstructed. Several old gold mining towns, such as Columbia, Johnsville, Coloma, Shasta, and Bodie, are California state parks or recreation areas. In recent years more people have become aware of the importance of California's gold rush in the history and development of the western United States, and steps have been made to preserve historical structures and equipment closely associated with gold mining. Unfortunately, little visible evidence remains of many of California's important gold-quartz mines other than caved shafts and tunnels and heavily overgrown dumps. The surface plants of the large underground lode mines at Grass Valley and along the Mother Lode belt, which for years accounted for a major part of California's gold output, have been almost completely dismantled. More evidence remains of the large-scale placer-mining operations. The old hydraulic mine pits and the extensive tailing piles in the dredging fields still exist; some are used as commercial sources of sand and gravel. A number of the old ditches, flumes, and reservoirs that once supplied water to the hydraulic mines now are parts of hydroelectric and irrigation system
Edited from: Gold Districts of California, by: W.B. Clark, California Departms. ent of Conservation, Division of Mines and Geology, Bulletin 193, 1970. |
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Payment Options:
Sorry No Finance Options Available For This Claim
Eureka Mining Company requires payment to be made within five buisness days of auctions end, unless otherwise discussed. Payment can be made via, personal check, money order, cashiers check, pay-pal and wire transfer. No claims will be transfered till payment has been cleared and paid in full. Thank You For Your Time and we at Eureka Mining Company look forward to working with you !!

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shipping details
Eureka Mining Company requires no shipping costs. All paperwork and postage is free, it is our pleasure. |
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additional information

About Eureka Mining Company

Eureka Mining Company is a full service mining company based in Nevada City, California. We specialize in mining and selling quality mining properties, both patented and unpatented and can provide mining equipment for both recreational and commercial prospectors. We have over 20 years of combined experience in California's colorfull Placer Mining Industry and are currently setting up commercial operations in Nevada County in the Red Dog Mining District. The material is derived from the Tertiary Yuba Channel and is also known as the Blue Lead Channel that extends into Sierra County. We will be mining and estimated 3 million yards of bulk material from the Ancient Channel using chemical free gravity seperation to extract precious mineral values. The scope of the project is 50 years with reclamation running concurrent to the mining activities. We are an enviromentally safe mining company practicing enviromentally friendly mining strategies. During our mining activities we will be ridding the land of harmfull waste left behind by earlier miners, such as Mercury, Lead, Iron, and other contaminents from the ground and groundwaters of California.

Eureka Mining Company also have dredging operations in nearby Greenhorn Creek in Nevada County, California during the dredge season. So remember from dredges to trommels we can help you obtain the right equipment for your property needs, at affordable prices. So feel free to call us today at 530-816-0451 with any questions about our claims or equipment being offered for sale on ebay, or schedule a site visit at mine. Thanks For Your Time !!!
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Our Payment Policy
Once payment has cleared you will receive a copy of the notarized warranty mining claim deed, a National Forest or BLM Map with your new claim marked clearly on it, gps coordinates and a welcome letter within 10 days of cleared payment. We do not charge any ownership transfer fee, we provide this service free of charge !! You will also receive detailed instructions and forms on how to maintain your new claim from year to year with our Welcome Packet, once again We Thank You For Your Buisness !! |
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Our Refund Policy
 
At Eureka Mining Company We strive for customer satifaction and approval. This is why we are the only sellers that give a 15 day money back gaurantee or we will trade you another claim of equal value that suits you. This is just another reason you should purchase your new claim or equipment from Eureka Mining Company !! | |
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