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this junction rich stone should be met with, provided the point of junctior is not too far below the point of entry of the golden drainage from the slate layers responsible for all the gold in this mine. I noticed the faces here had widths of ore varying from a foot or so to 10 or 12 feet, and that they are composed of quartz in places, but more frequently principally of slate. This slate contained many Vertical veins, an inch or so wide, of quartz, the whole forming a network, as it were, of minor points of obstruction to the concentration of the gold of the liquids circulating very slowly through the mass. I noted that the gold here is, as usual in the lodes of these parts, in grains of about the fineness of pepper, and appears to have been deposited in about equal quantities with sulphides, which have in numbers of instances been removed in part. The yields vary between 5 and 15 dwts. Of course, situations met with occasionally are equal to 20 ounces to the ton; but the mining system followed aims for a general average rather than for pickingand choosing. On the eastern side of the creek (the Victory is immediately west of it) is the Crescent lode, a so-called vertical formation going down in the trough of the corrugated rock layers. Its quartz " makes " are in lens form, as usual, and associated with its line is a dyke intrusion. The lode, the slate, and the dyke stuff are all black with graphite, and the work is as dirty as in a coal mine. I have noticed this feature in the " country " of several other lode-systems in this field, but in none is it as much in evidence as here. The company has worked large quantities of ore from a low-grade situation outcropping on the range, and it is now driving from the creek level on the line of the lode below this worked situation. This Crescent lode is the main line of an extensive system of lodes, of which the Victory is one—those on the eastern side of the Crescent not being opened yet. There is a lot of sulphide in the black country, but yields in gold so far have not been large ; the average from outcrop works in slate per­meated with veins and small " makes " of quartz is set down at 2 dwts. per ton, from a width of 40 feet. Even less would pay in bulk handling.
The Victory shaft is being sunk another 100 feet to test the quartz near the junc­tion of the " makes " there. A cross-cnt east to the Crescent formation from the new level to be openedisalsomooted. In the meantime, driving south on the course of the lode is being pushed on in the Crescent, with a view to locating one of the many favoured situations that are to be found along and down this main line of mineral concen­tration.
From the Crescent and Victory mines west about a mile is