Portal logo
806                                     MINERAL RESOURCES.
AGATE, MOSS AGATE, ETC.
WYOMING.
The production of moss agate in the United States comes princi­pally from the Wilde and Deercorn mine, 2 miles northwest of Guern­sey, in Laramie County, Wyo. This mine contains three claims and is located near the top of a hill or small mountain about 400 feet above the adjoining valley. The base and lower slopes of this hill are composed of red quartzites, phyllites, hornblende, and greenstone schists. These rocks are mapped under the name Whalen group by W. S. T. Smith a and are referred to the Algonkian age. The top of the hill is composed of limestone and quartzites resting unconform-ably on the Whalen group and dipping to the west at a low angle. These rocks belong principally to the Guernsey formation of Car­boniferous age as mapped by Smith.
The moss agate occurs in an irregularly shaped vein, varying from less than 1 inch to nearly 2 feet in thickness and cutting nearly ver­tically across the bedded limestones. This vein strikes northeast and has been opened at two places about 200 yards apart. At the southwest opening an open cut and drift about 75 feet long have been made on the vein. The openings do not reach a greater depth than 15 feet. The upper few feet of the limestone exposed in the opening has a light flesh color, and the lower layer is red and is banded. The vein appears to pinch out in places in the light-colored layer of lime­stone and does not reach the surface a few feet above the tunnel. In the floor of the tunnel the moss agate had a thickness of nearly 2 feet in one place and pinched down to a few inches in a short distance. Small stringers of moss agate occur in some of the vertical seams crossing or branching out from the main vein. The moss agate does not appear to be firmly attached to the wall rock, but is separated from it by a deposit of white chalky chalcedony or silica, and in places by layers of columnarcalcitecrystals. The vein filling is chalcedony or agate with a few small botryoidal chalcedony and drusy quartz lined cavities through it. The greater part of the chalcedony has abundant black moss-like arborescent and dendritic markings throughout. The agate varies in quality from opaque cloudy white to subtranslucent to translucent or subtransparent. The latter material furnishes the finest stone for gem purposes. The white and subtranslucent agate is plentiful, and contams smaller portions of clearer fine gem material distributed through it. The translucent agate is also found in smaller rounded masses with a chalky coating over their surfaces. The black stains (of manganese oxide) occur through both the cloudy and the translucent agate, with all the variations of form characteristic of the mocha stone or moss agate. The better grades furnish very fine gem material, and the cloudy varieties are suitable for mosaic and small ornaments, for which a portion is used. Blocks of several hundred pounds weight of cloudy white agate with translucent portions were seen around the mine, and it is reported that a 1,000-pound block was once obtained which was almost entirely composed of moss agate of good quality. About 3-1/2 tons of rough moss agate were mined during 1908, though none was sold.
aHartvillefolio (No. 91), Geol. Atlas U. S., U. S. Geol. Survey, 1903..