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820
MINERAL RESOURCES.
canyon is about 265 feet below the mouth of the old shaft on the cliff. The main drift has been carried to the east nearly 500 feet, with many hundred feet of levels and stopes above. The dike is somewhat irregular in shape and contains alternate rich and barren portions. The latter seem to be due, in places, to abundant inclusions of lime­stone, while in other places the dike pinches around projecting por­tions of the limestone walls. The outcrop of the dike in the foot of the canyon wall was not at first located, since it was rather indefinite and was partly covered with large blocks of talus. A crosscut tunnel was driven from the north side until the dike was located, and from this the main drift was carried eastward on the one side, and the dike traced to its outcrop in the canyon wall on the other. A large body of pay rock, apparently over 45 feet wide, was located by the cross­cut and drift. Though the relation of this ore body to the dike was not definitely known at the time of the writer's visit, it seemed to cut across the regular dike with a dip of about 40° to the east. No definite hanging wall had been located, though the pay streak was about 12 feet thick from the foot wall. This body of ore had been brecciated and the broken masses squeezed into slickensided lenses.
The mine is equipped with a track running to the mill near by. The track is protected between these points by a shed, in order that severe weather may not interfere with operations. The ore is handled in steel dump cars of improved pattern.
The method of treating the sapphire ore is quite different from that used by the New Mine Sapphire Syndicate, the ore receiving special mill treatment soon after mining. It has been found that over 50 per cent of the ore removed by blasting is fine enough for milling without disintegration by weathering. The ore direct from the mine, after passing through 4-inch grizzlies, is digested with water in heavy revolving screens. The latter discharge three classes of material, the fines or slimes, which are immediately discarded, the oversize or material still in lumps, which is saved for further treatment, and the digested matter ready for sizing and concentration. The lump material is left in stock piles to weather for a period of several months, by which time it is readily digested in the revolving screens and con­centrated. After sizing, the digested material is concentrated on Woodbury jigs arranged to treat three sizes, three-fourth and three-eighth inch and 6-mesh. Two jigs are run in series for safety. These jigs were handling about 75 tons in a day of seven and one-half hours at the time of the visit, though from 200 to 225 tons could be treated in twenty-four hours.
The concentrates from the jigs, in rare cases, run as high as 30 per cent sapphire, 5 to 10 per cent being more common. The concen­trates containing the watch-jewel sizes, or culls, are treated on a Blake-Morscher electrostatic concentrator and their, grade brought up to between 50 and 90 per cent sapphire. The final cleaning, as with the larger sizes suitable for cutting, is accomplished by hand picking. In filling hurry orders this cleaner is or value, since it enables a large quantity of sapphire to be selected much more quickly than could be done by hand alone. On the other hand, part of the sapphire goes over with the tailings, which require more labor to pick over than the original concentrates.
The operations of the American Sapphire Company have not yet reached the capacity of the plant, since much time has been con-