While in Colorado we heard about a gold mine that we could tour, outside of the town of Cripple Creek.
|
Kids thought this was hysterical |
This mine is a little over 1000 feet deep into the Earth. We learned that this actually is not that deep for gold mines; there are mines in South Africa that go well over a mile underground. At that depth, the heat of the planet begins to become a serious hazard for the miners.
|
We had an excellent tour guide who demonstrated many of the tools miners used, we saw how the equipment changed and improved over the years. However most of it continues to be quite loud! |
|
Tenderfoot miners' jobs were to fill these containers of soil and rock. They needed a quota and many could not mange it. |
|
Supposedly Jack Dempsy, one of the most famous boxers in history, was fired from two different mines because he didn't meet his quotas. |
Everything underground is powered by air pressure from compressors on the surface.
|
Getting an explanation on how dynamite was used and how it was carefully labeled to go off in a particular sequence |
The explosive and the detonation cord used to set off the explosion. Properly handling this type of explosive is a highly skilled job.
|
When mining gold you have to follow the veins so there are many levels. |
|
Often people were sitting on nothing more than a board for hours using heavy and loud machinery. It was not unheard of the vibration of the tool to literally knock someone off their board and then falling many flights to their death. |
|
We rode an old carriage under ground |
|
See saw a miner's bathroom. |
|
Next we were taken into a locked room were we saw gold nuggets |
|
We heard about the woman who owned this mine (which was considered very bad luck, so she only visited her mine twice giving it to her son to operate) The story goes that she was walking along a path and sat down to rest and at her feet she found a gold nugget. |
|
Seeing gold in a nugget |
|
We were each given gold ore which is not the same as the stone above. |
|
If we use toxic chemicals and produce a great deal of heat we might get a teensy tiny silver of gold! |
|
Learning about the bell system in tunnels which we were told was a standardized system and every mine in the world should recognize these signals. |
|
The elevator taking us up and down in the mine |
|
Next we stopped at a working mine, we could only tour the outside of the plant. Here is a tire of the big trucks that carry the dirt. |
|
We also saw a reclamation section that the mining company is working on to bring this area which has been completely stripped of gold back to life |
|
This mine is an open pit mining operation |
|
At the top we saw the old mining company buildings that still remain |
|
The old mining town |
I thought it was good for the kids to see how gold was mined in the 1800's which is very different from how it is done today. We also did not know that gold ore needs so much processing to produce actual gold. We asked the miner what he thought was the most dangerous mining occupation, and he said that, in his opinion, it was coal mining due to the explosive nature of what's being mined. In either case, underground mining of any type is still one of the most hazardous jobs in the world.