Mississippi #2 Mine, blasting taconite stripping

Date scanned: 2002-6-12. H-11; Blasting taconite stripping. Blast consisted of 92 24'-31' deep holes, spaced 12'-27' apart, charged with 20,000 lbs. of Gelatin and semi-gelatin explosives. Mississippi #2 Mine, The M. A. Hanna Company, Keewatin, Minnesota. - F. G. Anderson - Oct....

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Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Anderson, F. G., Arthur Lakes Library, Russell L. and Lyn Wood Mining History Archive, United States. Bureau of Mines
Format: Still Image
Language:unknown
Published: Colorado School of Mines. Arthur Lakes Library 1947
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11124/7379
Description
Summary:Date scanned: 2002-6-12. H-11; Blasting taconite stripping. Blast consisted of 92 24'-31' deep holes, spaced 12'-27' apart, charged with 20,000 lbs. of Gelatin and semi-gelatin explosives. Mississippi #2 Mine, The M. A. Hanna Company, Keewatin, Minnesota. - F. G. Anderson - Oct. 14, 1947. Held in the Russell L. and Lyn Wood Mining History Archive, Arthur Lakes Library, Colorado School of Mines. Donor: United States Bureau of Mines. The Mississippi #2 Mine was originally an underground iron mine from 1933 into the 1950s, and later operated as an open pit taconite mine. The Mine was part of the Mississippi Mine Group. The Mississippi mines include the old Mississippi Mine and consist of a group of open pit and underground iron mines Keewatin in the Mesabi Range, Itasca County, Minnesota. The mines were operated by the Hanna Ore Mining Company (M. A. Hanna Company) into the 1950s. The M. A. Hanna Company was one of the large mining companies that moved into the iron areas of the Lake Superior region in the early 1900s, consolidating smaller properties and engaging in exploration for other economic deposits. The Company was dissolved in 1965, then resurrected in 1985.