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Mineral resources and mineral resource potential of the Saline Valley and Lower Saline Wilderness Study Areas, Inyo County, California
| Content Provider | Semantic Scholar |
|---|---|
| Author | Wrucke, Chester T. Marsh, S. P. Raines, Gary L. Werschky, R. S. Blakely, Richard J. Hoover, Donald B. McHugh, Edward L. Rumsey, Clayton M. Gaps, R. S. Causey, J. Douglas |
| Copyright Year | 1984 |
| Abstract | This report presents the results of a mineral survey of the Saline Valley Wilderness Study Area and the Lower Saline Wilderness Study Area, California Desert Conservation Area, Inyo County, California. The Saline Valley Wilderness Study Area and the Lower Saline Wilderness Study Area were studied in 1981-83 using geologic, geochemical, remote sensing, and geophysical surveys and the examination of mines and prospects to evaluate mineral resources and the potential for mineral resources. The Saline Valley Wilderness Study Area has a high potential for the occurrence of gold resources in two areas. One area, largely outside the study area, is in the vicinity of the Crater mine in the Last Chance Range, and it has potential for the occurrence of gold in a disseminated deposit in an epithermal environment. The other area is in Marble Canyon in the western part of the study area, and it has high potential for the occurrence of gold placer deposits. Marble Canyon also has a moderate potential for gold in placer deposits downstream from the area of high potential. Seven areas, scattered from the Inyo Mountains to the Last Chance Range, have a low potential for the occurrence of gold in disseminated deposits, and onemore » area that lies astride the border of Death Valley National Monument has a low potential for the occurrence of gold in vein deposits. The southern end of Eureka Valley has a low potential for the occurrence of lithium and uranium resources in buried sedimentary deposits for the occurrence of lithium and uranium resources in buried sedimentary deposits beneath the valley floor. Demonstrated resources of native sulfur exist at the Crater mine but no resource potential was identified nearby in adtacent parts of the study area. 3 figs. (ACR)« less |
| File Format | PDF HTM / HTML |
| DOI | 10.3133/ofr84560 |
| Alternate Webpage(s) | https://pubs.usgs.gov/of/1984/0560/report.pdf |
| Alternate Webpage(s) | https://doi.org/10.3133/ofr84560 |
| Language | English |
| Access Restriction | Open |
| Content Type | Text |
| Resource Type | Article |