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Pride of the West Mine (Washington Mine), Nash Mines group (Duquesne-Washington group), Duquesne-Washington Camp, Patagonia Mining District, Patagonia Mountains, Santa Cruz County, Arizona, USAi
Regional Level Types
Pride of the West Mine (Washington Mine)Mine
Nash Mines group (Duquesne-Washington group)- not defined -
Duquesne-Washington CampMining District
Patagonia Mining DistrictMining District
Patagonia MountainsMountain Range
Santa Cruz CountyCounty
ArizonaState
USACountry

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Latitude & Longitude (WGS84):
31° 22' North , 110° 42' West
Latitude & Longitude (decimal):
Type:
Nearest Settlements:
PlacePopulationDistance
Kino Springs136 (2011)10.5km
Francisco Miguel CΓ‘rdenas Valdez (MascareΓ±as)541 (2014)13.5km
Beyerville177 (2011)17.1km
Santa Cruz1,038 (2018)17.8km
Patagonia890 (2017)19.9km
Nearest Clubs:
Local clubs are the best way to get access to collecting localities
ClubLocationDistance
Huachuca Mineral and Gem ClubSierra Vista, Arizona43km
Mindat Locality ID:
25029
Long-form identifier:
mindat:1:2:25029:1
GUID (UUID V4):
03eccbb7-94a0-4c4f-8da9-dd5af7ee2c34


A former underground Cu-Ag-Zn-Pb-Au mine located in the SE ΒΌ sec. 34, T23S, R16E and the center NΒ½NΒ½ sec. 3, T24S, R16E (protracted), 1/3 mile SW of Washington Camp, at an elevation of about 5,700 feet, in the lower east slope of a lobelike ridge descending from the crest of the range. Patented (private) land ? - see group file description). Located about 1880 by a party of prospectors. Leased to Mr. Salisbury in the very early 1880's. Later W.A. Clark took a bond on the mine. In 1898 N.H. Chapin leased his partners' interests in the mine. Beginning in April, 1899, C.R. Wilfley took out an option on a half interest in the mine and purchased the other half. The mill was later enlarged and about this time Wilfley and the Corey brothers organized as the Pride of the West Co., with headquarters at Denver, CO. About 1906 the property was acquired by the Duquesne Mining & Reduction Co. Also owned at times, or in part, by the Humphrey Mining Co.; Byrd; Radon Mining Co.; and Nash Mines.

Bill Panczner - 2003 advised that this mine has an accompanying mill which was the location where C.R. Wilfley developed his still used "Wilfley Table" for the separation of ore. The mine is now filled in and the shaft collar is marked by a simple fence with four posts.

Mineralization is massive, banded and bedded, partly drusy, replacement bodies of irregularly mixed quartz, calcite, garnet, sulfides and magnetite in crystalline and pyrometamorphosed Permian Naco Group limestone along a contact with intrusive Laramide granodiorite. Shallow oxidation and some supergene enrichment.

The contact-metamorphic deposit lies in the crystalline limestone along the footwall side of a dike of the quartz monzonite. The dike strikes N.17W. and dips about 50ΒΊW., but the dip flattens in the lower part of the mine. At the mine the dike is apparently conformable with the limestone and is about 60 feet wide, but it widens southward to 250 feet at the Giroux shaft. At a point 500 feet south of the shaft it incloses a horse of crystalline limestone 100 feet long and 20 feet wide, whence it extends southward into the main are of the quartz monzonite.

At the mine the dike is composed of a peculiar siliceous facies of the rock, which is fine-grained and resembles aplite. The dike separates a body of coarsely crystalline, apparently very pure limestone 200 feet wide, from a considerable mass of siliceous, banded limestone on the west side. So far as can be observed, all the rock adjoining the east side of the dike consists of this coarse limestone. Close to the dike and north of the tunnel the limestone is extraordinarily coarse.

At a point 100 feet NW of the mine tunnel and 6 feet east of the dike the limestone is composed of coarsely crystalline white calcite and is very pure, but at the mouth of the tunnel it is silicified or completely changed to diopside. In the vicinity of the mine garnet appears along the footwall side of the dike and the ore deposit forms a zone 30 feet wide, consisting mainly of irregularly mixed coarse calcite, garnet, sphalerite, chalcopyrite, pyrite, pyrrhotite, and a little magnetite. Locally it is vertically banded or bedded.

Workings featuring the Giroux shaft, at 400 feet deep, plus a tunnel at 700 feet long, driven S.7ΒΊW., and a 400 foot deep winze, and a 50 foot inclined shaft containing 3 levels with drifts and stopes. There is also a large surface cut 32 feet wide and 250 feet long. Worked from the early 1880's and sporadically through 1955. Produced some 103,000 tons of ore averaging about 4.5% Cu, 4 oz. Ag/T, 1.4% Zn and minor Pb and Au.

Select Mineral List Type

Standard Detailed Gallery Strunz Chemical Elements

Mineral List


14 valid minerals.

Detailed Mineral List:

β“˜ Andradite
Formula: Ca3Fe3+2(SiO4)3
β“˜ Calcite
Formula: CaCO3
Description: Coarse to very coarse, pure massive.
β“˜ Chalcopyrite
Formula: CuFeS2
β“˜ Diopside
Formula: CaMgSi2O6
Description: A microscopic component of the ore.
β“˜ Epidote
Formula: (CaCa)(AlAlFe3+)O[Si2O7][SiO4](OH)
Description: Small, almost colorless crystals and grains in ore.
β“˜ Gedrite
Formula: ◻{Mg2}{Mg3Al2}(Al2Si6O22)(OH)2
Colour: Yellowish-brown
Description: Intimately associated with hedenbergite and penetrates, and in part is interlaminated with it.
β“˜ Hedenbergite
Formula: CaFe2+Si2O6
Colour: Yellowish-green
Description: Massive; intimately associated with gedrite and penetrated by it, and in part interlaminated with it.
β“˜ Hematite
Formula: Fe2O3
Description: A microscopic component of the ore.
β“˜ Hematite var. Specularite
Formula: Fe2O3
Description: A microscopic component of the ore.
β“˜ Magnetite
Formula: Fe2+Fe3+2O4
Description: A little occurs in the ore deposit.
β“˜ Pyrite
Formula: FeS2
β“˜ Pyrrhotite
Formula: Fe1-xS
β“˜ Quartz
Formula: SiO2
Habit: Well-developed; to 1 foot (30 cm) in length.
Description: As numerous druses in garnet filled with well-developed crystals.
β“˜ Sphalerite
Formula: ZnS
Colour: Yellowish-brown
β“˜ Tremolite
Formula: ◻Ca2Mg5(Si8O22)(OH)2
Description: Common.

Gallery:

List of minerals arranged by Strunz 10th Edition classification

Group 2 - Sulphides and Sulfosalts
β“˜Sphalerite2.CB.05aZnS
β“˜Chalcopyrite2.CB.10aCuFeS2
β“˜Pyrrhotite2.CC.10Fe1-xS
β“˜Pyrite2.EB.05aFeS2
Group 4 - Oxides and Hydroxides
β“˜Magnetite4.BB.05Fe2+Fe3+2O4
β“˜Hematite4.CB.05Fe2O3
β“˜var. Specularite4.CB.05Fe2O3
β“˜Quartz4.DA.05SiO2
Group 5 - Nitrates and Carbonates
β“˜Calcite5.AB.05CaCO3
Group 9 - Silicates
β“˜Andradite9.AD.25Ca3Fe3+2(SiO4)3
β“˜Epidote9.BG.05a(CaCa)(AlAlFe3+)O[Si2O7][SiO4](OH)
β“˜Diopside9.DA.15CaMgSi2O6
β“˜Hedenbergite9.DA.15CaFe2+Si2O6
β“˜Gedrite9.DD.05β—»{Mg2}{Mg3Al2}(Al2Si6O22)(OH)2
β“˜Tremolite9.DE.10β—»Ca2Mg5(Si8O22)(OH)2

List of minerals for each chemical element

HHydrogen
Hβ“˜ Epidote(CaCa)(AlAlFe3+)O[Si2O7][SiO4](OH)
Hβ“˜ Gedrite◻{Mg2}{Mg3Al2}(Al2Si6O22)(OH)2
Hβ“˜ Tremolite◻Ca2Mg5(Si8O22)(OH)2
CCarbon
Cβ“˜ CalciteCaCO3
OOxygen
Oβ“˜ AndraditeCa3Fe23+(SiO4)3
Oβ“˜ CalciteCaCO3
Oβ“˜ DiopsideCaMgSi2O6
Oβ“˜ Epidote(CaCa)(AlAlFe3+)O[Si2O7][SiO4](OH)
Oβ“˜ Gedrite◻{Mg2}{Mg3Al2}(Al2Si6O22)(OH)2
Oβ“˜ HedenbergiteCaFe2+Si2O6
Oβ“˜ HematiteFe2O3
Oβ“˜ MagnetiteFe2+Fe23+O4
Oβ“˜ QuartzSiO2
Oβ“˜ Tremolite◻Ca2Mg5(Si8O22)(OH)2
Oβ“˜ Hematite var. SpeculariteFe2O3
MgMagnesium
Mgβ“˜ DiopsideCaMgSi2O6
Mgβ“˜ Gedrite◻{Mg2}{Mg3Al2}(Al2Si6O22)(OH)2
Mgβ“˜ Tremolite◻Ca2Mg5(Si8O22)(OH)2
AlAluminium
Alβ“˜ Epidote(CaCa)(AlAlFe3+)O[Si2O7][SiO4](OH)
Alβ“˜ Gedrite◻{Mg2}{Mg3Al2}(Al2Si6O22)(OH)2
SiSilicon
Siβ“˜ AndraditeCa3Fe23+(SiO4)3
Siβ“˜ DiopsideCaMgSi2O6
Siβ“˜ Epidote(CaCa)(AlAlFe3+)O[Si2O7][SiO4](OH)
Siβ“˜ Gedrite◻{Mg2}{Mg3Al2}(Al2Si6O22)(OH)2
Siβ“˜ HedenbergiteCaFe2+Si2O6
Siβ“˜ QuartzSiO2
Siβ“˜ Tremolite◻Ca2Mg5(Si8O22)(OH)2
SSulfur
Sβ“˜ ChalcopyriteCuFeS2
Sβ“˜ PyriteFeS2
Sβ“˜ PyrrhotiteFe1-xS
Sβ“˜ SphaleriteZnS
CaCalcium
Caβ“˜ AndraditeCa3Fe23+(SiO4)3
Caβ“˜ CalciteCaCO3
Caβ“˜ DiopsideCaMgSi2O6
Caβ“˜ Epidote(CaCa)(AlAlFe3+)O[Si2O7][SiO4](OH)
Caβ“˜ HedenbergiteCaFe2+Si2O6
Caβ“˜ Tremolite◻Ca2Mg5(Si8O22)(OH)2
FeIron
Feβ“˜ AndraditeCa3Fe23+(SiO4)3
Feβ“˜ ChalcopyriteCuFeS2
Feβ“˜ Epidote(CaCa)(AlAlFe3+)O[Si2O7][SiO4](OH)
Feβ“˜ HedenbergiteCaFe2+Si2O6
Feβ“˜ HematiteFe2O3
Feβ“˜ MagnetiteFe2+Fe23+O4
Feβ“˜ PyriteFeS2
Feβ“˜ PyrrhotiteFe1-xS
Feβ“˜ Hematite var. SpeculariteFe2O3
CuCopper
Cuβ“˜ ChalcopyriteCuFeS2
ZnZinc
Znβ“˜ SphaleriteZnS

Other Databases

Link to USGS MRDS:10210816

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