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822                                     MINERAL RESOURCES.
The gold recovered from concentrates is mostly fine, though nuggets worth several dollars have been reported. It is said the value of the gold obtained is sufficient to pay operating expenses. The larger part of the sapphire, either on account of small size or poor color, is suitable for mechanical purposes only, as watch and meter bearings. Some of the sapphires are suitable in size, quality, and color for cutting as gems. The predominant colors of the Dry Cotton­wood sapphires are deep and light aquamarine and pale yellowish green. Other colors are clear and smoky blue, light and dark topaz yellow, straw yellow, yellowish green like olivene, light and dark pink; some stones are nearly ruby red, lilac and pale amethystine, and some are colorless. The pleochroism of some of the sapphires is marked, the same crystal appearing greenish when viewed across the prism and blue through its length, or pale and deeper pink, as the case might be. It is not unusual to find aquamarine-colored stones with a pink spot in the center. This combination furnishes an attractive gem when cut. A feature of the deep pink colored sapphires is their rich and beautiful color under artificial light, even when not very attractive in natural light.
The sapphires occur in rough crystals, often with curved faces, as irregular rounded masses, and as waterworn pebbles. The surfaces of those which are not waterworn are very much etched and corroded. One yellowish-green sapphire crystal, weighing a little over 4$ carats, had very much the shape of a rough diamond crystal. This effect is largely due to the fact that the development of the basal and rhombo-hedral faces produced a form resembling an octohedron. This appar­ent octohedral form along with marked curvature of the faces and peculiar etching produces the effect described. The proportion of waterworn sapphires is not large, and only a few show a large amount of wear. A few red and cinnamon-red garnets, mostly small, are found in the concentrates with the sapphires.
American Gem Mining Syndicate.—The operations of the Ameri­can Gem Mining Syndicate for sapphires were confined to two gulches on the north side of the West Fork of Rock Creek, in Granite County, about 15 miles southwest of Philipsburg. These gulches are nearly a mile apart and are known as Anaconda Gulch on the west and Meyer Gulch on the east. Both drain to the south, Anaconda Gulch with a rather steep grade cutting through a small stretch of flat country along part of its course. Sapphires are said to have been found in the gulches and scattered over the surface of an area of about 2 square miles in this region.
The country rock around the sapphire deposits consists of coarse and fine grain porphyry, porphyritic tuff, conglomerate, quartzite, siliceous slate, and black limestone, the geological relations of which have not been worked out. In and near Anaconda Gulch the rocks underlying parts of the sapphire deposits are conglomerate, porphy­ritic tuff resembling conglomerate where the inclusions are plentiful, and porphyry. The bed rock in the lower part of Meyer Gulch is a dense, siliceous slaty rock of purplish color with a little black limestone. To the west of the sapphire-bearing deposits on the flats near Anaconda Gulch is rather coarse porphyry, probably granite porphyry, and to the north is fine porphyry. Ledges of tuff or con­glomerate outcrop at one place on the flats where sapphires have been