SME Presentation

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cuzzinjack
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SME Presentation

Post by cuzzinjack »

On February 25th, 2020 I gave a presentation at the national conference of the SME (Society of Mining, Metallurgy, and Exploration) at the Phoenix Convention Center, and it was called “Mid-Tertiary IOCG deposits in Arizona and a “Lost” mining district”. This was a tremendous challenge for me, because I had to render down over 15 years of fieldwork and research I’ve done down to 20 minutes and 22 slides!
The presentation turned out very well, but just to attend the conference for one day, it was a lot of money, because you could not purchase a ticket to attend just one presentation. So, I’m sharing it with you here slide by slide, with all the bullet points that were presented:

SLIDE 1

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• Welcome everyone.
• My presentation is about a “Lost” mining district in the Superstition Mountains area about 35 miles east of here, and it is a culmination of 15 years of study and research.
• People have been looking for 130 years for lost mines or a “mine” in the Superstition Wilderness area, but the mines are not in the wilderness area.
• The oldest printed story that I’ve read about lost mines in the area was printed in the Phoenix newspaper in 1893, and it was about prospectors that had found a “Great Mine” just north of Superstition Mountain with many shafts, and what appears to be described as a large subsidence zone. The prospectors then wandered up to Goldfield to find something much greater the story said.
• The next oldest study that I’ve read was from 1895 by a writer named Bicknell in a San Francisco Paper. Bicknell interviewed dozens of people in this area from all ethnic backgrounds, and the consensus was that there was a mine with an 80-foot shaft, and that the mine was in a “District”. In 1895 there was only one kind of district, and that was a mining district; a place where there are many mines.
• Over time, the story devolved until it became a tale of one mine, and people forgot what the word “District” meant.
• The term “The Lost Dutchman”, did not even surface until 1952, when a book by the same name was published.
• This photo is of the north side of Superstition Mountain, and in the area in the photograph, 400 of a Peralta-led party were massacred by Apaches in 1848, at the end of the Mexican-American war. The party was hiding mines that had been mined by the Peralta family from northern Mexico since the early 1700’s. The Americans had just taken what is now the southwestern part of the U.S. from Mexico.

SLIDE 2

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• Some may say, “How can an entire mining district be “Lost” outside the Superstition Wilderness area given todays’ technology?”
• This is a map of the Mineral Potential of the Superstition Wilderness and the surrounding area prepared in 1981 by the U.S. Bureau of Mines.
• 1981 was the beginning of the greatest down cycle in mining since the last depression, and this study was likely forgotten about.
• The red areas have high mineral potential and are outside of the wilderness area.
• The red area to the southeast is where the great Resolution deposit was discovered in 1992.
• The red area on the west end has had little or no exploration since 1981.
• The “G” in the red area marks the historic gold mining district of Goldfield.
• The “X” in the red area marks location of the Molly Marie Prospect

SLIDE 3

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• The Molly Marie Prospect is a group of 20 contiguous mining claims sited on a collapse caldera over one mile in diameter.
• The red lines outline the group of claims
• A collapse caldera is created when the magma chamber of a volcano evacuates and the rock above it collapses.
• In this case, the volcano was then eroded to its base.

SLIDE 4

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• This is a google earth photo of the Goldfield mining district located only 2-1/2 miles away from the Molly Marie Prospect.
• The Goldfield District is also sited on a collapse caldera and the volcano here was also eroded to its base.
• The brown areas on the margin are breccias. Breccia consists of fragments of rock that are created when the center of the caldera collapses, and the rock fragments are ejected around the margin of the caldera. Breccias are an excellent host for ore.
• Only a few mines that were in the Goldfield District are labeled here. They are all located in breccias.
• The Mammoth Mine was the largest. It was discovered in 1893 when a flash flood exposed mineralization in Weekes Wash. A shaft was sunk and the Mormon Stope was struck only 35 feet below the surface. The gold ore ran hundreds of ounces of gold to the ton. The stope was 20 feet wide and 200 feet long. The grade continued to the 400 foot level, and the mine reached the depth of 1022 feet below the surface. Even here, the grade was still .66 ounces of gold per ton.
• The Old Wasp claim labeled here had a major strike in 1983. A vein 8 feet wide was struck with a backhoe. The vein was heavy with galena, and a one foot wide portion of the vein ran 244 ounces of gold and 50 ounces of silver per ton. A million dollars worth of gold at 1983 prices was removed from a small open stope near the surface.
• These two mines are just examples of the bonanza gold found in Goldfield.

SLIDE 5

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• Now, back the Molly Marie caldera, here is a highly enhanced google earth photo of it.
• The reddish areas are breccias that are found in multitudes greater abundance than those found in Goldfield. The red areas have highly magnetic soil as evidenced by the inset on the lower left. Just by kicking the soil and dropping a magnet on it produces instant results.
• Please note the spot marked with an “X” and the hill dubbed “Cerro Negra” . These will be talked about in detail.

SLIDE 6

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• Many areas were found in the brecciated areas of the Molly Marie caldera that were suspected to have been mined by others by surface pits and filled back in.
• These disturbed areas were suspected to have been the same type of orebodies that were mined in Goldfield.
• A seismograph was rented two times from Geometrics. The refraction method was used on 12 areas in total. The data was screened by rented software, and the data from 8 areas was sent to a geophysicist for further analysis.
• This slide is a tomogram from the spot marked with an “X” in the previous slide, and was prepared by Zapata geophysical in Denver. This represents a pit 40 feet deep, 120 feet long, and the area is about 80 feet wide.
• All 8 areas that were screened and had the data sent to geophysicists indicated pits.
• Even though the outcrops of the orebodies have been removed, an alteration zone remains that surrounds the orebody.
• The inset in the upper right shows what the alteration looks like. The normally tan-colored arkose of the Whitetail formation has been altered to black chlorite, a type of mica. This type of alteration is commonly found surrounding the sub-seafloor portions of VMS deposits in Canada, but it was learned that it also surrounds the perimeter of a cousin of the VMS ore deposit, the IOCG (Iron Oxide Copper Gold deposit).

SLIDE 7

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• This is the Molly Marie Prospect ore genesis model.
• 20 million years ago, southern Arizona was covered in deep brine lakes, because the Colorado River had not been formed yet.
• Concurrent and with the brine lakes and adjoining them was the Superstition volcanism.
• There are 3 main types of IOCG deposits, and this is the caldera type.
• The brine is highly corrosive and it dissolves the metals from the volcanic debris of the volcano. The solution percolates through the debris, surrounding rock, and the breccias and boils off near the magma chamber. The metals precipitate at the boiling zone in the breccias and beneath the layer of basalt in the caldera.
• The breccias are a great “trap” for metals because the rock fragments chemically react with the hot metal-laden brine. However, beneath the basalt exists even a greater trap. The basalt is an aquaclude stopping the upwelling hot brine, but the upper portion of the Whitetail formation contains a high amount of limestone. The limestone neutralizes acidic solutions which also cause the metals to precipitate.
• The inset on the upper right shows the rock that is found at the volcanic neck. It is a rhyolite porphyry that is very high in iron and can be highly magnetic. This porphyry is pre-enriched in metals by nature and is what the volcanic debris was comprised of.
• The inset on the lower right is the massive hematite porphyry found in large outcrops at “Cerro Negra”
• Supergene gold is also in the model. Supergene gold is created when the brine lakes subside and residual salt dissolves the gold in the ore and it is precipitated at the water table. This process creates incredibly rich gold deposits, and this is what the pits were focused on.

SLIDE 8

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• After the seismic testing was done, it was concluded that beyond a reasonable doubt many filled-in pits were located in the breccias.
• If all this ore was mined, it had to be processed somewhere nearby.
• Of all the old maps “out there” only one showed a processing area, and this was the “Minas del Oro” map, or “Gold Mines” map in this slide.
• This was found to be the most comprehensive map in existence. It is made of leather and the third digit is worn off, so it could be from 1814, 1824, 1834, or 1844. Many experts have concluded that this map is authentic.
• The river labeled Rio Salado was believed to be incorrectly name, because the Salt River runs east-west, and most maps have north at the top. It was believed this had to be First Water creek that flows in First Water Canyon most of the year except for droughts.
• Please note that “Negra” is the center piece of the map and appears to be a fold in the basalt.
• Please note certain features on this map, as it will be shown on a google earth photo where their locations are. Notably, the locations of the Negra, Picacho, Campo Mayor, Arrastras, Camino, Placeras del Oro, and Minas will be shown.

SLIDE 9

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• This slide is a google earth photo of the area represented by the Minas del Oro map.
• The spot that is “Negra” is the hill dubbed “Cerro Negra”. This is the only fold found in the basalt for miles around.
• The “Campo Mayor” corresponds with a place called Hackberry Spring. This spring flows year-around, and it is located at the foot of a 500-foot tall cliff. This cliff is orientated in a direction so the sun never hits the bottom as can be seen by the shadow in the photo. This is quite a literal oasis, and is the perfect location for the main camp.
• The place where the arrow points from the label “First Water Creek” was suspected to be where the arrastras (crushers) where located.
• The spot labeled “cart ruts” will be shown in detail, and are located on the large “Camino”(road) on the map.
• The “Placeras del Oro” (gold placers) were suspected to be in First Water Canyon, and will be shown in detail.
• The “Minas” on the map were suspected to be the pits that were proven seismically.

SLIDE 10

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• This is the “Picacho” shown on the map, and is just northeast of the “Minas” shown on the Minas del Oro map. Some call this Gonzales rock.

SLIDE 11

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• This is “Cerro Negra”, the hill that is the great fold in the basalt. This is looking east.

SLIDE 12

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• After taking several hikes into First Water Canyon to prove my suspicions, ruts were noticed in the road that were suspected to be cart ruts (the photo labeled “before”).
• A broom, camera, and tall stepladder were brought out to clean the ruts and photograph them from above, and the photo labeled “after” was gained.
• Note the circled area where there are flat grooves created where the wheels rolled over a small ledge. It can be seen that these were created by steel rims. The other grooves were filled with gravel after rains and the wheels made rounded grooves.
• The hill and road behind the camera in the “before” photograph is very steep (>25%) and could not be negotiated with carts. The carts had to “zig-zag” down the hill. This is zig-zag is even shown on the Minas del Oro map.
• The road shown was made in the 1970’s by a small dozer making a road to the satellite First Water Map. The dozer apparently disturbed the topsoil, and monsoons did the rest. The Peralta’s must not have known that they existed, or they would have removed them.

SLIDE 13

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• The cart ruts were evidence of countless loads of ore being hauled down to First Water Creek for processing.
• The ore absolutely had to be processed using amalgamation and mercury or approximately 50% pf the gold would have been lost.
• A mercury vapor detector was rented to test the air and soil in the area.
• A research paper was found about testing the soil in Potosi, Bolivia for mercury. Potosi is likely the most mercury-polluted place in the world due to the use of the patio process for recovering silver.
• In Potosi, small holes was dug, and the “sniffer” of the mercury vapor detector was immediately put in the hole, and the soil briefly expelled mercury vapor.
• The same method was used on a large flat area near the creek by the satellite First Water Ranch, and an extremely high amount of mercury vapor was detected. As can be seen in the slide, the vapor started at .87 ug/m3, peaked at 2.75 ug/m3, and returned to 0, all in 13 seconds. These readings were almost identical to that found at Potosi, and this same level of mercury vapor was found in several holes.
cuzzinjack
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Re: SME Presentation

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SLIDE 14

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• The vapor detector was taken to First Water Creek about 75 yards away, to see what readings could be obtained in the open air.
• This creek bottom appears to be thoroughly cleaned to bedrock, by placering.
• The alarm on the vapor detector did not sound off continuously, but it did go off frequently for hundreds of yards upstream of the awning shown in the google earth photo.
• It was only 90 degrees outside that day, and this was not a good place to be due to the mercury vapor.
• There are no orebodies upstream, and it is suspected that the ground-up ore that was processed by others without mercury was reprocessed with mercury. This is the modus operandi of the Chinese, and was done throughout the American West by them.

SLIDE 15

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• So now it was known where the pit mines were and where the ore was processed, but where were the underground mines?
• It was strongly suspected they were located at Cerro Negra (the fold in the basalt). The fold would be the best trap for gold both physically and chemically, because it is an anticline with both breccias and limestone beneath.
• A story kind of “fell in my lap”, and it is called the “Salazar Survey” and written by Clay Worst.
• The story begins with a man called Cristobal Peralta that visited Tucson in 1924. He hired Perfecto Salazar as his guide and interpreter. Cristobal was from Spain, but he was raised in Mexico.
• To make a long story short, they were driving several miles north of Apache Junction on Apache Trail (now Highway 88) and Cristobal had Perfecto pull over.
• Cristobal pulled out a large map and proceeded to tell Perfecto that in 1853, five years after the massacre, the Peralta’s returned to the mines and conducted a clandestine mining operation. They brought surveyors, and a photographer, even though photography was in its infancy.
• Perfecto did not remember much from the map (he didn’t tell anyone about this until 1949)
• Perfecto wrote the numbers 4 and 62 on a paper bag afterwards that he remembered were prominently displayed on the map.
• Clay Worst tried to solve the mystery in 1949, with surveying equipment, but was unsuccessful.
• I thought the numbers could be the numerical portions of quadrant bearings; quadrant bearings were used by the Lewis and Clark Expedition and I used them when surveying 40 years ago. This method in hardly used anymore, or not at all.
• It was suspected that the full quadrant bearings would be N4E and S62E, and they were referencing Cerro Negra, and were the bearings to two prominent landmarks from the Cerro Negra. It is an age-old technique to give a location for a place in the boonies with the bearings to two landmarks. Where the bearings intersect is the location.
• One of the suspected landmarks was a tiny hole though the top of a mountain shown in the inset. This hole can be seen just before sunrise all along First Water Road and disappears when the sun comes up. It is made for Hollywood.
• The second landmark was El Sombrero or Weavers Needle.
• Working the locating technique backwards, the brunton compass in the inset was taken to the top of Cerro Negra to take the bearings to the landmarks. The declination was set to 0. This cannot be solved with google earth because Cerro Negra is highly magnetic and the compass is turned considerably there. The bearings have to be taken physically from Cerro Negra.
• N2E and N65E were the bearings taken to the tiny hole and El Sombrero respectively.
• These were 2 and 3 degrees off respectively from the Salazar numbers.
• The magnetic declination has changed by 3 degrees since 1853.
• When the 2017 numbers were adjusted for declination as shown in the table in the slide, the bearing to the tiny hole was off by one degree, and the bearing to El Sombrero was exactly the same.
• Considering Salazar gave whole numbers to begin with, and the brunton is accurate to within a half of a degree, the numbers are a perfect match.
• The bearings give the exact location of Cerro Negra, and it is impossible that what has been described is by coincidence.

SLIDE 16

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• Salazar said Cristobal Peralta had three small glass photographs with “El Sombrero” in the background of each of them. They were taken at different distances from the mine on the same bearing.
• Weavers Needle looks like a hat in a very small area. Salazar specifically said “El Sombrero”.
• This slide is a replication of how he describes photo #2. That is Cerro Negra in the center. Bicknell described the mine as being within a 5-mile radius of Weavers Needle. The distance to Cerro Negra from El Sombrero is 6 miles.
• There is a strong suspicion that Cristobal and Perfecto walked to Cerro Negra. It is only a 20 minute hike from the highway.

SLIDE 17

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• All attention now turned to Cerro Negra.
• Cerro Negra had always been viewed in normal plan view on google earth
• By rotating google earth to a south looking position, and lowering the viewing angle, it was shocking to see what appeared to be large subsidence zone on the east side of Cerro Negra since a center post for a mining claim had been set in the middle of it 10 years before.
• The inset in the lower left shows what the outcrop looks like on the ridge on the north side of Cerro Negra. The rock is volcanic tuff, and it is tipped into the subsidence zone.
• Note the spot labeled “portal” as it will be shown later. This was discovered a couple of years ago in the summer during a bad drought. Bees were flying in holes between rocks at the base of a short cliff there. After backing up a hundred feet or so and throwing rocks at the spot, it was known that the bees were after water and it wasn’t a bee hive. Later that winter, a hole was dug at the base of the cliff, and a “brow” was encountered and a large void was found under the brow. It was filled with saguaro fruit from packrats. It was concluded that it was a portal.
• Note also the area labeled “saddle”. This photo doesn’t do it justice, but the saddle is a literal highway across the canyon and the subsidence zone.

SLIDE 18

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• This is what the subsidence zone looks like up close. It looks like it happened yesterday. The saddle is to the upper right, and El Sombrero can be seen over the top of the ridge.
• The inset on the lower right shows how magnetic the rock is in the subsidence zone. This is a washer magnet and it easily stands on edge on the magnetic rock. It can be seen how the rock is saturated by quartz veinlets.
• Magnetism seems to be a great indication of ore on Cerro Negra. Wherever there are apparent cave zones (especially on the south side of Cerro Negra) the rock is highly magnetic within each one. This may be indicative of a boiling zone and/or convection cell beneath.

SLIDE 19

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• So, are there any maps that seem to indicate multiple shafts like the 1893 newspaper article?
• Yes, there is. The Burbridge map was found hidden in the cover of an old book in Mexico in the 1960’s. It was read that this map was truly dated to the 18th century by the University of Arizona.
• The map is of an apparent mine development project that lasted four years, 1749-1753.
• The copy of the map did not have the Salt River on it and the trail leading from it that are on the original. These were added in red.
• The title is a mixture of Portuguese, Latin, and Spanish. Ona is Latin for “District”. The full translation is “The Esteemed People of the Salt River District of the North.”
• The map shows a workers camp for men and one for women. This is indicative of forced labor.
• The Pima revolt was in 1751, and pretty much ended the forced labor of native people by the Spanish and Jesuits. It is suggested that these people were Chinese. (another story)
• It is suggested that the trail labeled “footprint trail” is because the trail was made by people with no wheels and no horses (pre-columbian miners).

SLIDE 20

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• This map shows the Burbridge map laid over a google earth photo of Cerro Negra. The “pass” and the edge of the rhyolite were used as anchors when expanding the map. The map was not rotated.
• The contact zone of the Rhyolite and the basalt is important because beneath the basalt the Rhyolite contacts the upper Whitetail that has much limestone. These are excellent conditions for gold skarn deposits.
• This may not seem earth shaking at here, but please note the shafts labeled 1, 2, and 3.
• This is the Burbridge Level of the mine, or the upper level.

SLIDE 21

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• This is the Ortiz map and was given by an Apache man to a rancher near the Salt River, Ortiz.
• The Apache man said the map was taken off a dead prospector that the Apaches had killed.
• The oddity of this map is the date of 1884. All mining should have been long before that.
• It is very important to note the spot where it appears there is a portal with water draining out of it.

SLIDE 22

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• This is the Ortiz Map placed over the top of the Cerro Negra photo.
• The portal spot shown earlier and the edge of the Rhyolite were used as anchors.
• This map was not rotated when overlain. It is clear that it was surveyed and due north was used.
• The tunnel passes exactly beneath the ridge on the north side of Cerro Negra. This is an anticline as described previously, the perfect gold trap.
• The drift to the north runs right next to the contact zone of the rhyolite and the basalt (or the Whitetail below).
• The drift to the west is just beneath the basalt. The surface elevation of this area and the portal checks out.
• There is a very large subsidence zone in the “Y” formed by the tunnels on the southwest side of the hill. This area is highly magnetic.
• The 1,2, and 3 match up with the 1,2, and 3 of the Burbridge overlay above. The shafts were extended to the level below.
• This is the second level of the mine, about 50 feet below the Burbridge Level. It is now dubbed the “Ortiz Level”.
• Like many old districts like Pachuca and Virginia City, a drainage tunnel has to be driven farther out to drain the lower levels. In this smaller case, the drainage tunnel was driven in mostly ore.

SLIDE 23

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• This map was not included in the presentation because there was not enough time, but it belongs here.
• It shows the exact general arrangement of Cerro Negra as presented. The tiny hole through the mountain, the placers, and Cerro Negra. The mines apparently didn’t need any introduction on this map or the Minas del Oro map. It must have been well known and the “minas” label was not needed on Cerro Negra.
• This map is looking southeast and it indicates three placered areas. About two hundred feet north of the original or main First Water Ranch there is a large piles of boulders that are piled up like many placers in the west. A pile of boulders is shown on the southernmost placer in the map here. First Water Creek passes through here and it appears ore was processed here also, and the sand was later reprocessed. This was not known when the vapor detector was rented.

SLIDE 24

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Re: SME Presentation

Post by cuzzinjack »

There is also a conclusion at the end of SLIDE 22

• This is the last slide of the presentation.
• More than a just a compelling argument has been given that a mining district can be “lost” right out in the open in plain sight
• There is a much more evidence that there was not time to present; please visit the website for more.
• The District would have not been lost if it were not for the Mexican American War; it would have been mined out.
• There was much hatred then, and there is still some for the U.S. taking what is now 5 states from Mexico.
• There is excellent exploration potential on the Molly Marie Prospect, and in the entire area. There are at least 4 collapse calderas, and Government Well deserves special attention.
• Please see me after this presentation if you would like to talk more about the subject.

cuzzinjack
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Re: SME Presentation

Post by azdave35 »

nice post...thanks for taking the time to post it
cuzzinjack
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Re: SME Presentation

Post by cuzzinjack »

Thank you Dave,

I made a lot of errors and omissions and I posted it on its own web page after some corrections and changes on the website below. That is the risk of posting here; you cannot correct what you have posted. Your mistakes are forever.

https://mollymarieprospect.com/blog/sme-presentation/

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Potbelly Jim
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Re: SME Presentation

Post by Potbelly Jim »

Ditto Dave, nice post Jack. Also thanks for the link! Good stuff.
Jim R.
cuzzinjack
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Re: SME Presentation

Post by cuzzinjack »

Thanks Jim. I have a little bit more to add:

To practice for the SME National Conference, the presentation was given to the local SME chapters in Globe and Phoenix. The local chapters had a bigger time slot to fill and it required a presentation of about 40 minutes. So, a “prequel” was given, starting where it is believed the whole story began.

INTRO

The rest of this presentation will not be given at the National Conference.
There is a much bigger story about the missing mining district than has been told so far. The “footprint trails” of the Burbridge map shown earlier is a clue that there was a pre-Columbian presence in the Salt River District of the North. The rest of the presentation this evening is about where I believe the story began, in Tenochtitlan, the capital of the Aztec empire.

SLIDE 25

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• Cortez entered Tenochtitlan on November 8, 1519, captured Montezuma, and held him hostage. In return, the conquistadors demanded that the Aztecs bring them all of their gold. The Spanish stayed in Tenochtitlan and melted the Aztec artwork and religious relics into bars until July 1, 1520. It is estimated that they had smelted 8000 pounds of gold.
• The Aztecs finally attacked on July 1, 1520 and nearly annihilated the Spanish. All of the gold was left behind.
• Neither the gold bars nor the source of the gold were ever found (by non-Aztecs).
• Neither the Aztecs nor the Incas knew how to part gold and silver. Some Spanish knew this was clue to the gold’s source because it had an uncommonly high gold/silver ratio.

SLIDE 26

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• The four survivors of a shipwreck in 1527 on the coast of Florida return to Mexico in 1536 with tales of Cibola and the seven cities of gold. This drives the lust for gold in New Spain to a peak.
• Finally in 1539, Viceroy Mendoza commissions Fr. Marcos de Niza for a mission to a) ensure that Mexico is not an island and b) to verify the stories of gold.
• Accompanying the entourage is Esteban, an ex-slave, one of the four survivors of the wreck.
• The routes in the slide and the following accounts were according to the reports of Marcos de Niza.
• Cibola was a known place (not mystical) and the Meso-American trail system extended to there from Mexico City.
• Marcos and Esteban traveled together up the coast of the Sea of Cortez, verified Mexico was not an island, and turned back inland.
• Marcos and Esteban split up near present day Nogales because Esteban wanted to be the first to reach Cibola.
• It is suspected that Esteban went east to the San Pedro river where the main trail was located and then up to Cibola (the Zuni Pueblo).
• Marcos travels up the Santa Cruz river to Casa Grande and Marcos calls this "Chichilticale". This is an Aztec name meaning “Red House”.
• Casa Grande is only about 35 miles from the Salt River District of the North.
• Marcos then travels to the main trail and to Cibola. He gets within sight of Cibola, and meets the Esteban party, without Esteban, fleeing south. Marcos reports that Cibola is as large as Mexico City.
• Marcos learns that Esteban was killed by the Zuni chief for assaulting and killing a girl.
• Marcos and both parties travel south to Mexico City.
• At that time, Mexico City (Tenochtitlan) was the largest city in the world with a population of about one million.

SLIDE 27

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• After de Niza tells Viceroy Mendoza that Cibola is as big as Mexico City, Mendoza commissions the Coronado expedition in 1540 and assigns Fr. Marcos de Niza as their guide.
• The Coronado expedition consisted of about 1600 people and was privately funded.
• When the expedition gets near the Chiricahua Mountains, east of the San Pedro River, de Niza tells Coronado the small Kuykendall ruins is Chichilticale. Coronado is disappointed, so the name "Chichilticale" had meaning in the legend.
• When the expedition neared Cibola they learned that Cibola is just a stone pueblo, and most of the expedition wanted to kill de Niza.
• Marcos de Niza is spirited back to Mexico City. Marcos de Niza’s replacement writes that de Niza was almost a week behind Esteban, and he never saw Cibola.
• The Coronado expedition continues far into Kansas.
• As a little known part of the Coronado expedition, Hernando Alarcon took 3 ships up the Sea of Cortez (it wasn’t named that yet) to the mouth of the Colorado river. A long letter by Alarcon exists that describes the expedition. No European had been up the Colorado or even to the mouth of the Colorado before.
• Hernando was to resupply the Coronado expedition.
• The Alarcon party took two small sailboats up the Colorado, and it is clear after reading the letter that they turned and then went up the Gila River, and the boats were empty.
• The Gila was navigable by even steamboats until 1927 after the completion of the Coolidge dam.
• The sailboats made it upstream to within 10 days on foot from Cibola
• Unlike other Conquistadors, Hernando Alarcon was kind to the natives.
• Through interpreters, Hernando learns there is no gold in Cibola, and he learns about Esteban’s death and that Esteban was in Cibola for two months before being killed by the Zuni chief. One of the interpreters had been to Cibola.
• Another Fr. Marcos de Niza untruth was revealed. Marcos had two months that were accounted for, not just a week.
• Hernando and party make it to either the confluence of the Salt and the Gila rivers or Casa Grande before returning to the ships.
• Hernando makes a second mission with the sailboats, and this time goes up the Colorado and complains about strong current. He buries food for the Coronado expedition near the mouth of the Gila, and some letters that were found in the sand the following year by another explorer.
• Hernando’s ships had to leave like “a thief in the night” in the first Mexican port in Hernando’s letter, at night, after too many questions were asked. Hernando disappears from history.
• Conclusion after the last 2 slides: Marcos de Niza was a Franciscan, and this order was known for trying to save indigenous people from the horrors of Spanish occupation. Nearly every native in the Caribbean was slaughtered by the Conquistadors. Marcos told at least three whoppers:

1) He told Coronado that the Kuykendall ruins near the Chiricahua Mountains were Chichilticale.
2) That Cibola was larger than Mexico City.
3) That he was almost a week behind Esteban. He was 2 months behind.

• Hernando’s sailboats went upstream empty even though their first order of business was to resupply the Coronado expedition. It was impossible to resupply the Coronado expedition to begin with.
• The Spanish new very well where they were going in the Marcos de Niza, Coronado, and Alarcon expeditions because the Aztecs and other natives new the geography well.
• Marcos de Niza intentionally guided the huge Coronado expedition far to the east of the mining district and thus quenched the fire of any further gold finding expeditions by leaving most of the Coronado expedition broke and destitute (privately funded).
• It is suggested that Marcos de Niza and party mined and hid the mines in his first expedition and left a large shipment for Hernando to pick up the next year.

SLIDE 28

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• For 250 years, the Manila Galleons took over half of the silver and gold from New Spain to China.
• Silver commanded 50% more in price in China.
• The Manila Galleons could hold 2000 tons of cargo and up to 1000 passengers.
• The galleons brought silk, porcelain, spices, and mercury in return.
• Many Chinese were also brought back to New Spain.

SLIDE 29

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• The map in the slide was drawn by Padre Eusebio Francisco Kino and is of Pimeria and Apacheria in 1701.
• Padre Eusebio Francisco Kino was a Jesuit, well-known for their business dealings.
• He was an expert in astronomy, mathematics, cartography.
• He petitioned many times to be assigned to China during Jesuit training.
• Kino’s first assignment in the New World was establishing missions on the coast of the Sea of Cortez.
• He was directly tied to the Manila Galleons though Admiral Atondo of the Sea of Cortez
• Kino was a rich man and owned ranches in northern Sonora
• He made at least 4 trips to the Gila and Casa Grande with 80, 90 and even over 100 horses
and mules.
• His home base was Mission Nuestra Senora de Los Delores and it was only 50 miles from the Peralta home base of Arizpe, Sonora, and 40 miles south of Nogales Arizona.
• It is a theory that the district stayed idle from 1640 until around 1700.
• It is further theorized that Kino reactivated the district with the mining expertise of the Peralta’s and Chinese Labor. He alone had all the connections to the Peraltas, the Manila Galleons, and the shipping in the Sea of Cortez.
• It is further concluded that all people and materials travelled up the Gila River by boat to the mining district, not overland.

SLIDE 30

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• Chinese workers? How could that be?
• As shown earlier, this creek bottom has been reworked with mercury; lots of it.
• The author is no stranger to a gold pan, and this place has been cleaned out extremely well.
• Only one group of people were this good at placering and who used a lot of mercury to do it. The Chinese.
• There were two well documented accounts in the late 1800’s of Apaches speaking fluent Chinese with Chinese people.
• Many Apaches look exactly like Chinese as many others and this author have noted.
• As shown earlier, the Burbridge Map of 1753 indicates forced labor was used, and the Pima revolt, ending the forced labor of natives was in 1751. The Chinese were the only other candidates that could have been put in forced labor.
• The Chinese were readily available considering the huge capacity of the Manila galleons.
• It is theorized the Chinese eventually intermarried with the Apaches and never left the area.

SLIDE 31

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This is a map of all the people, places, and things involved with the Salt River District of the North (from the Burbridge Map). Generally, the newer characters are on the left, and the older characters are on the right.

SLIDE 32

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• This gold bar was found near the site of Tenochtitlan in 1981 while excavating for a building foundation.
• The bar is on display at the Museo Nacional de Antropología in Mexico City.
• This bar appears to be about 80% gold, roughly the grade of the gold mine in Goldfield.
• This is the last slide of this presentation.
• The entire story of the Superstition Mountains mystery has been shown this evening from beginning to end.
• It has been shown that there is strong evidence that the Salt River District of the North was the source of the Aztec gold.
• The Franciscans and natives did an excellent job hiding the District the first time, and the Peralta’s, and even later, the Apaches, did great jobs after that.
• Most people and materials travelled up and down the Gila by boat to get to the District, not leaving a trace.

SLIDE 33

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• The above photo shows just how simple it was for boat travel from Kino’s home mission and Arizpe to the mining district. It is not known if the Concepcion River was navigable by small boats in the 18th and 19th centuries. Likely it was. If not, it is about 150 miles to the coast of the Sea of Cortez. Small craft could have even went up the Salt River.

It was not known when the presentation was given, but in In the January 2020 issue of Arqueología Mexicana, it was published that the Instituto Nacional de Antropologia e Historia, recently performed a non-destructive XRF (X-Ray Fluorescence) of the Tenochtitlan bar shown above, and it was dated to 1520.
• Additionally, the XRF showed that the bar was 76.2 ± 1% de oro, 20.8 ± 1% de plata y 3.0 ± 0.5% de cobre (76% Au, 21% Ag, 3% Cu). This is roughly the same grade as most of the gold electrum found in Goldfield, and the same would be expected from the “Salt River District of the North.”
• There are likely many other trace elements that were detected in the XRF element package that was used for the study that may further prove the gold came from the Goldfield area. Research will continue.

cuzzinjack
cuzzinjack
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Re: SME Presentation

Post by cuzzinjack »

This is a photo today of First Water Canyon. The creek was still flowing about 100gpm. There is no other water available to the west of here. Up ahead is where the high mercury levels were detected.

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