Northwest history. Mining. Assays. 1932-07-31
Rating |
|
Original index title |
Northwest history. Mining. Assays. 1932-07-31 |
Newspaper |
Spokesman-review ; 1932-07-31 |
Title |
Big dike makes Elk City great - filled with gold bearing veins, it is 12 miles long, says Lewiston attorney - nature protected it - but a great highway to Triumph- will be opened for travel in September |
Description |
Big dike makes Elk City great - filled with gold bearing veins, it is 12 miles long, says Lewiston attorney - nature protected it - but a great highway to Triumph- will be opened for travel in September - The Crooked River dike is an impressive feature on the face of Idaho county, Idaho, according to E. W. Griffith, an atttorney of Lewiston, Idaho. After studying a property adjoining the dike, a noted mining enginer, Adolph Challis of Philadelphia, said the property "would make a mine for it is on the west side of the greatest mineralized dike in the world" |
Subject Keys |
Northwest history; mining industry; mining assays; ores; sampling; prospecting |
Date.Original |
1932 |
Resource Identifier |
nwh76-203 |
Subjects |
Northwest, Pacific -- History Mining -- Northwest, Pacific Ores -- Sampling and estimation -- Northwest, Pacific Prospecting -- Northwest, Pacific Mines and mineral resources -- Northwest, Pacific |
Resource Type |
Text |
Genre |
Clippings |
Format.Use |
Image/JPEG |
Source |
Northwest History box 76 |
Language |
English |
Rights |
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/CNE/1.0 |
Rights Notes |
Copyright not evaluated. Contact original newspaper publisher for copyright information. |
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