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Mining Deseret: Upcoming Presentation 2014 09 26 in Salt Lake City, UT

Last Updated: 13th Jun 2014

By Russell Hartill

This is the title of a presentation being made on September 26, 2014, in Salt Lake City, Utah.
I will be presenting on the second day of this three day FREE event:


The Prospector and the Burro: Will Higgins and the Life Cycle of Innovation

A link to the generic intro to this event: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8nyYd8yxp4Y&feature=youtu.be

I will be posting my notes on the colorful history of mining in Utah as we get closer to the presentation date.

Registration Info http://heritage.utah.gov/history/register

September 26 2014 at the Leonardo (Salt Lake City's downtown science museum -2nd East between 4th and 5th South)
11:00am – 12:15pm, Classroom 2, The Leonardo

Save the date reminder flyer : http://heritage.utah.gov/wp-content/uploads/AnnualConferenceFlyer1.pdf


Exploring and documenting the life cycle of innovation as exemplified in historic Utah mining within the pages of Will C Higgins’ Mining Review, 1899-1929.

All technological advances go through a cycle of discovery, daring, deals, dividends, decline and disruption. This paper will review key prospecting and mining discoveries and innovations in Utah and the West through the lenses of these six phases. From Vipont to Silver Reef, Gold Hill to Moab as well as the central Utah districts of Alta, Park City, Bingham, Ophir, Mercur, all the towns of Tintic as well as Frisco, Joy and Diamond, Granite and more will all be discussed. Utah technological innovations ranging from the Eimco mucker to concrete lined shafts and ore dressing techniques will all be examined.

Announcing: Mining Deseret: an overview of the history of mining in Utah and the American West

The territories comprising Deseret contained mineral values that helped finance the Civil War, fuel the Roaring Twenties, and usher in the atomic age. Silver, gold, copper and lead brought Utah and the West from isolated rural towns to modern interconnected urban cities while uranium, beryllium, rare earths and oil shale may help write a new chapter of Western American History.

The history of mining is the story of weathered wooden headframes silhouetted against an azure blue sky; prospectors and their burros; gold, gossans and gloryholes; stopes and stamp mills; but above all it is the story of man's incurable optimism in the pursuit of minerals. From Jesse Knight's Humbug mine that helped save the LDS church financially to Charles Steen's discovery of the MiVida near Moab in the 1950s, mining in Utah is a colorful kaleidoscope of chronology, biography, geology and technology in the pursuit of mineral wealth. Through maps, images, sounds, texts, artifacts and videos we will turn the kaleidoscope and freeze it at many interesting glimpses into our rich mineral past.

The pagentry of mining is also encapsulated within the life cycle of innovation as exemplified in 19th and 20th century Utah mining and documented in Will C Higgins' Mining Review, 1899-1929. Higgins wrote a monthly column for several decades totaling 300 plus pages of observations and analysis of the most entrepreneurial activity of his day-prospecting and mining. Higgins' insights and his foresight provide valuable lessons for the emerging tech markets of today.

From prospectors assayers and grubstakers to entrepreneurs venture capitalists and developers, all technological advances go through a cycle of discovery, daring, deals, dividends, decline and disruption. This soon-to-be-completed book will review key prospecting and mining discoveries and innovations in Utah and the West through the lenses of these six phases.

Russell Hartill is a lawyer and mining historian and co-author of Desert Fever and author of Preserving Our Mining Heritage. Russ graduated from California State University Fullerton with a degree in history after work at the Colorado School of Mines (Geophysical engineering) and Cal State Sacramento (rec and park admin) His JD is from the University of Idaho College of Law.

As Executive Director of the National Historic Mining Initiative, an L3C based in Utah, he leads a team dedicated to the dynamic interpretation and dissemination of western American mining history.





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