Glossary

                   
ADIT: A horizontal or nearly horizontal entrance to a mine, otherwise
                    known as a tunnel.
                   
ARRASTRA: A Spanish word for a circular rock-crushing device
                    usually powered by a mule.
                   
ASSAY: Measuring proportion of gold or silver content in ore.
                   
CLAIM: A legal document stating the boundries of a proposed mining
                    excavation.
                   
DREDGE: A mining process by which sand in a river bed or stream
                    is scooped up from the bottom and minerals are extracted.
                   
FLOAT: Fragments of ore that had broken off a main vein to become
                    buried rock outcropping.
                   
HEADFRAME: The vertical apparatus over a mine shaft that has
                    cables to be lowered down the shaft for the raising and lowering of
                    ore and men.
                   
HIGH GRADING: A method perfected by miners for carrying off rich
                    ore from the mines and selling it themselves.
                   
HYDRAULIC MINING: A process of washing ore from its bed with
                    powerfull jets of water.
                   
JUMPING A CLAIM: A method of taking over a good mining claim
                    after it had already been staked out by someone else.
                   
MILL: A building in which rock is crushed in order to extricate
                    minerals. Mills are usually constructed on the side of hills and are
                    gravity fed. This leads to the stairstep foundations one can usually
                    see.
                   
MOTHER LODE: The main or primary deposit or vein of a given
                    mineral.
                   
NUGGET: A lump of native or pure gold found in deposits and placer
                    mines.
                   
PLACER: A waterborne deposit of sand or gravel containing heavier
                    minerals like gold that have been eroded from their original bedrock
                    and concentrated as small particles that can be washed out.
                   
PLATTING: Planning or mapping a townsite.
                   
SHAFT: A vertical or nearly vertical opening into the Earth's surface.
                   
SLUICE: an inclined trough, usually made of wood, for washing gold
                    ore. The flow of the water is regulated by flood gates.
                   
SMELTER: A building or complex in which material is melted to be
                    separated from impurities.
                   
STAMP MILL: A machine that crushes rock by means of a big heavy
                    stamp that falls on the rock.
                   
TAILINGS: Waste or refuse left after milling is complete, sometimes
                    referred to as waste dumps.
                   
WASTE DUMP: Waste rock that comes out of a mine.
                   
WINZE: A shaft sunk from an adit.
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