Pahranagat, Palmetto, Pamlico Districts

Publication Info:
Nevada Mining Districts (Compiled Reports)
The Districts Described in This Section are from the following publications:

Mining Districts of Nevada - Nevada Bureau of Mines and Geology Report 47 (updated 1998); Placer Gold Deposits of Nevada - USGS Bulletin 1356 (1973)

Table of Contents

Pahranagat District

Overview

Other Names: Hiko, Irish Mountain, Pahranagat Lake, Crescent, Boomerang

County: Lincoln

Discovered: 1865

Organized: 1865

Commodities: manganese, silver, lead, copper

Comments

Located in the vicinity of Silver Canyon in the Mount Irish Range about 10 miles northwest of Hiko. The original name was Pahranagat but the district was later sometimes known as Pahranagat Lake, also sometimes referred to as Hiko for the nearby mill town, or as Irish Mountain, for the peak in central part of district. In 1871, the Crescent district, covering an area near Crescent Spring, was formed from the Pahranagat district but was in existance for only a short period of time. The Nevada Miner (1902) mentioned a Boomerang district that may have been located in the area of the Crescent Mine.

References

Stretch, 1867, p. 64; White, 1869, p. 80; Wheeler, 1872, p. 43; Angel, 1881, p. 485; The Nevada Miner, Sept. 15, 1902, 16:2; Hill, 1912, p. 217; Lincoln, 1923, p. 123; Stoddard, 1932, p. 53; Averett, 1962, p. 33, Tschanz and Pampeyan, 1970, p. 149; Tingley, 1991, p. 11

Palmetto District

Overview

Other Names: Pidgeon Springs, Fesler, Windypah

County: Esmeralda

Discovered: 1866

Organized: 1866

Commodities: silver, gold, lead, copper, talc

Comments

Located in the Palmetto Mountains in the vicinity of Palmetto Peak. Lincoln (1923) included the Windypah (Fesler) district to the north in the Palmetto district. The Pidgeon Springs district, also included by Lincoln (1923) in this district, is actually within the Sylvania district to the southwest.

References

Stretch, 1867, p. 44; White, 1869, p. 96; White, 1871, p. 104; Angel, 1881, p. 417; Hill, 1912, p. 208; Lincoln, 1923, p. 79; Stoddard, 1932, p. 40; Gianella, 1945, p. 58; Albers and Stewart, 1972, p. 70; Carlson, 1974, p. 247; Papke, 1975, p. 8; Bonham, 1976

Pamlico District

Overview

Other Names: Hawthorne, Clarendon, Silver Circle, Sulfide, Sulphide

County: Mineral

Discovered: 1866 (1885)

Commodities: gold, copper, silver, uranium, iron, barite

Comments

The Pamlico district is located in the western Garfield Hills in T6-7N, R31-32E, and includes Pamlico, Never Sweat, and Bromide Canyons. Pamlico is sometimes included in the larger Hawthorne district, along with the adjacent Lucky Boy and Ashby districts. According to Stretch (1867), the Clarendon district was located “in the southwestern section of the [Nye] county.”

The Territorial Enterprise (1868) used Silver Circle as an alternate name for Clarendon and located the district 7 miles from the old Virginia (Rhodes) Salt Marsh. The 1880 map showed the historic Clarendon district to include the present Pamlico, Ashby, and Garfield districts. Schilling (1976) listed Sulphide as an alternate name.

References

Stretch, 1867, p. 58; Territorial Enterprise, February 2, 1868,1:2; Lincoln, 1923, p. 144; Stoddard, 1932, p. 60; Vanderburg, 1937a, p. 35; Reeves and others, 1958, p. 75; Ross, 1961, p. 82; Archbold and Paul, 1970, p. 1; Garside, 1973, p. 83; Bonham, 1976; Schilling, 1976; Bonham, 1980; Wong, 1982, table 1; Papke, 1984, table 3

Pamlico (Hawthorne) Placer District Description

Location

Central western edge of the Garfield Hills on land outside the eastern boundary of the Naval Ammunition Depot Reservation T 7 N R. 31 E.

Topographic Maps

Pamlico 7 1/2 -minute quadrangle.

Geologic Maps

Archbold and Paul, 1970, Geologic map of the Pamlico mining district (pi. 1), scale 1:24,000; Geologic map of the main Pamlico mines (pi. 2) , scale 1 : 2,400.

Access

From Hawthorne, a dirt road leads southeast about 10 miles to the Pamlico area.

Extent

Small placer deposits of unknown extent and exact location have been worked intermittently in the vicinity of Pamlico Hill and Pamlico Canyon (sees. 13 and 24, T. 7 N., R. 31 E.) at the western edge of the Garfield Hills.

Production History

The Pamlico placers have apparently been worked since 1908, the first year of recorded production attributed to the Hawthorne district. During 1915 and 1916, deep deposits at Pamlico in Pamlico Canyon were worked by drift mining, and slope wash or skree on Pamlico Hill was worked by placer methods. Subsequent placer mining has been on a small scale and intermittent.

Source

Gold-bearing quartz veins in volcanic rocks of the Excelsior Formation (Triassic?).

Literature

Archbold and Paul, 1970: Brief history of placer mining; geology of bedrock and lode deposits.

Lincoln, 1923: States that placers were worked in the vicinity of the Pamlico mine by drift mining from 1915 to 1917.

Paher, 1970: Brief history of mining activity at Pamlico; photograph shows placer mine where a shaft was dug 170 feet to bedrock.

U.S. Geological Survey, 1915: Reports drift mining at Pamlico; method of mining; depth of gravels; average value of gold in gravels; production. 1916: Reports placer mining of erosional material on Pamlico Hill; source.

Vanderburg, 1937b: Notes placer mining in Pamlico Canyon below the Pamlico mine; estimate of placer production in 1912; depth of gravels.

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