Northwest History. Alaska, Mines & Mining -- Dredging. United States.

Iron Dinosaur Conquering Gold Fields Of Far North: Dredges Carried In By Plane Reclaim Low Grade Ore. Iron Dinosaur Conquering Gold Fields Of Far North Dredges Caried In By Plane Reclaim Low Grade Ore. SEATTLE, April 1. (/P) - The iron dinosaur is conquering gold fields in the land of the midnight s...

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Language:English
Published: 1935
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Online Access:http://content.libraries.wsu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/clipping/id/101094
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spelling ftwashstatelib:oai:content.libraries.wsu.edu:clipping/101094 2023-05-15T17:05:40+02:00 Northwest History. Alaska, Mines & Mining -- Dredging. United States. Wenatchee Daily World 1935-04-01 Iron Dinosaur Conquering Gold Fields Of Far North: Dredges Carried In By Plane Reclaim Low Grade Ore. 1935-04-01 http://content.libraries.wsu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/clipping/id/101094 English eng nwh-sh-12-14-3-13 http://content.libraries.wsu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/clipping/id/101094 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/CNE/1.0 Copyright not evaluated. Contact original newspaper publisher for copyright information. Northwest History Alaska box 12 iron dinosaur gold fields Far North low grade ore Seattle mechanical miners the Roosevelt age auriferious gravel Alaska Chinamen's washing golden territory Northwest development airplane dredge gold price Good News Bay district Tanana Nome Lower Yukon Lower Kuskokwim Takotna district Frank Cotter smelter Earle W. Knight the states Eugene C. Allen gold rush steamship companies Northwest Pacific -- History -- 20th century Text Clippings 1935 ftwashstatelib 2021-07-26T19:23:03Z Iron Dinosaur Conquering Gold Fields Of Far North: Dredges Carried In By Plane Reclaim Low Grade Ore. Iron Dinosaur Conquering Gold Fields Of Far North Dredges Caried In By Plane Reclaim Low Grade Ore. SEATTLE, April 1. (/P) - The iron dinosaur is conquering gold fields in the land of the midnight sun. Great gold dredges, mechanical miners of the Roosevelt age, that eat into the auriferous gravel, today started their open season on the gold of Alaska, biting Into the earth to recover valuable ore that formerly was not worth a "Chinamen's washing." The iron monsters are dredges that are making a fortune for their owners in the Alaskan gold fields. Thev take ore worth as little as 15 cents a cubic yard and make it. pay a profit. They rake gold from ground fortune hunters have abandoned. Move By Plane With the coming of spring, dredges started operations all over Alaska, the "golden territory," because Northwest development of the airplane has made it possible to ship these ponderous machines, piece by piece, far into the interior. They work more ore per day than hundreds of old time prospectors, and with the current gold price of $35 an ounce, which sourdoughs hope will go even higher, they now work ore that formerly was not worth bothering about. A dredge in a gold field is regarded as efficient when it works 22 hours and 10 minutes out of 24 hours. Unlike the prospector, it never has to stop for lunch or sleep. It handles 5,000 to 6,000 tons of gravel a day. The big dredging areas of Alaska this year are the Good News Bay district, the Tanana, Nome, Lower Yukon, Lower Kuskokwim and Takotna districts. No Need For Smelter "Dredges handle placer gold," peetor of Alaska, "and amalgamation recovers the values without the necessity of sending the ore to a smelter. Today a dredge can be shipped to the farthest prold district in Alaska by airplane." Earle W. Knight, of the Alaska Weekly, authoritative Alaskan publication in the states, called attention to the recent development of the dragline scraper, "It can work a tremendous yardage of low grade material with great economy," he said. "And it can handle geographical situations with which the old time dredges could not cope. It works on a stiff-legged boom, and can reach the inaccessible points, making posible recovery of greater values." "With the airplane, the dragline scraper and portable machinery," said Eugene C. Allen, another veteran of the gold rushes, "anything is possible in Alaska today. We can get gold from places no one could ever reach in the days of the dogsled and the prospector's pick." Great quantities of dredge equipment are being shipped north this spring, the steamship companies say. Text Kuskokwim Nome Alaska midnight sun Yukon Washington State University: WSU Libraries Digital Collections Pacific Yukon
institution Open Polar
collection Washington State University: WSU Libraries Digital Collections
op_collection_id ftwashstatelib
language English
topic iron dinosaur
gold fields
Far North
low grade ore
Seattle
mechanical miners
the Roosevelt age
auriferious gravel
Alaska
Chinamen's washing
golden territory
Northwest development
airplane
dredge
gold price
Good News Bay district
Tanana
Nome
Lower Yukon
Lower Kuskokwim
Takotna district
Frank Cotter
smelter
Earle W. Knight
the states
Eugene C. Allen
gold rush
steamship companies
Northwest
Pacific -- History -- 20th century
spellingShingle iron dinosaur
gold fields
Far North
low grade ore
Seattle
mechanical miners
the Roosevelt age
auriferious gravel
Alaska
Chinamen's washing
golden territory
Northwest development
airplane
dredge
gold price
Good News Bay district
Tanana
Nome
Lower Yukon
Lower Kuskokwim
Takotna district
Frank Cotter
smelter
Earle W. Knight
the states
Eugene C. Allen
gold rush
steamship companies
Northwest
Pacific -- History -- 20th century
Northwest History. Alaska, Mines & Mining -- Dredging. United States.
topic_facet iron dinosaur
gold fields
Far North
low grade ore
Seattle
mechanical miners
the Roosevelt age
auriferious gravel
Alaska
Chinamen's washing
golden territory
Northwest development
airplane
dredge
gold price
Good News Bay district
Tanana
Nome
Lower Yukon
Lower Kuskokwim
Takotna district
Frank Cotter
smelter
Earle W. Knight
the states
Eugene C. Allen
gold rush
steamship companies
Northwest
Pacific -- History -- 20th century
description Iron Dinosaur Conquering Gold Fields Of Far North: Dredges Carried In By Plane Reclaim Low Grade Ore. Iron Dinosaur Conquering Gold Fields Of Far North Dredges Caried In By Plane Reclaim Low Grade Ore. SEATTLE, April 1. (/P) - The iron dinosaur is conquering gold fields in the land of the midnight sun. Great gold dredges, mechanical miners of the Roosevelt age, that eat into the auriferous gravel, today started their open season on the gold of Alaska, biting Into the earth to recover valuable ore that formerly was not worth a "Chinamen's washing." The iron monsters are dredges that are making a fortune for their owners in the Alaskan gold fields. Thev take ore worth as little as 15 cents a cubic yard and make it. pay a profit. They rake gold from ground fortune hunters have abandoned. Move By Plane With the coming of spring, dredges started operations all over Alaska, the "golden territory," because Northwest development of the airplane has made it possible to ship these ponderous machines, piece by piece, far into the interior. They work more ore per day than hundreds of old time prospectors, and with the current gold price of $35 an ounce, which sourdoughs hope will go even higher, they now work ore that formerly was not worth bothering about. A dredge in a gold field is regarded as efficient when it works 22 hours and 10 minutes out of 24 hours. Unlike the prospector, it never has to stop for lunch or sleep. It handles 5,000 to 6,000 tons of gravel a day. The big dredging areas of Alaska this year are the Good News Bay district, the Tanana, Nome, Lower Yukon, Lower Kuskokwim and Takotna districts. No Need For Smelter "Dredges handle placer gold," peetor of Alaska, "and amalgamation recovers the values without the necessity of sending the ore to a smelter. Today a dredge can be shipped to the farthest prold district in Alaska by airplane." Earle W. Knight, of the Alaska Weekly, authoritative Alaskan publication in the states, called attention to the recent development of the dragline scraper, "It can work a tremendous yardage of low grade material with great economy," he said. "And it can handle geographical situations with which the old time dredges could not cope. It works on a stiff-legged boom, and can reach the inaccessible points, making posible recovery of greater values." "With the airplane, the dragline scraper and portable machinery," said Eugene C. Allen, another veteran of the gold rushes, "anything is possible in Alaska today. We can get gold from places no one could ever reach in the days of the dogsled and the prospector's pick." Great quantities of dredge equipment are being shipped north this spring, the steamship companies say.
format Text
title Northwest History. Alaska, Mines & Mining -- Dredging. United States.
title_short Northwest History. Alaska, Mines & Mining -- Dredging. United States.
title_full Northwest History. Alaska, Mines & Mining -- Dredging. United States.
title_fullStr Northwest History. Alaska, Mines & Mining -- Dredging. United States.
title_full_unstemmed Northwest History. Alaska, Mines & Mining -- Dredging. United States.
title_sort northwest history. alaska, mines & mining -- dredging. united states.
publishDate 1935
url http://content.libraries.wsu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/clipping/id/101094
geographic Pacific
Yukon
geographic_facet Pacific
Yukon
genre Kuskokwim
Nome
Alaska
midnight sun
Yukon
genre_facet Kuskokwim
Nome
Alaska
midnight sun
Yukon
op_source Northwest History Alaska box 12
op_relation nwh-sh-12-14-3-13
http://content.libraries.wsu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/clipping/id/101094
op_rights http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/CNE/1.0
Copyright not evaluated. Contact original newspaper publisher for copyright information.
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