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Mines - Big Missouri
The Big Missouri group of claims lies astride Big
Missouri Ridge about 5 miles due north of Premier. This claim which is the oldest in the Salmon River
district, was located in 1904.
Prior to 1927 work consisted of the
development of visible surface mineralization by open
cuts, short adits, and limited diamond drilling. In 1927 the Buena Vista Mining Co. Ltd. assumed control of the group which was
being developed by the Big Missouri Mining Co. Ltd., a holding of the Standard
Mining Corporation.
It was at this time that The Consolidated Mining and Smelting Company of
Canada, Limited took control and eventually brought the property into production in 1938
from ore bodies on the Providence claim.
To facilitate
development of the property, a road was built to Premier, a camp
and powerhouse
erected at Hog Lake, and a small hydro dam constructed at the west side of Long Lake
to utilize
the Divide Lake-Long Lake storage basin.
As part of the mine
development scheme, a 750-ton mill was built underground between the 2,100- and
2,300-footlevels, with tailings disposal and surface access on the Salmon
Glacier side of the ridge.
The present Granduc road now passes over the remains of the
surface tramway built to provide transport on the west slope between the 2,300-
and 2,800-footlevels. After initiating full production in early 1938 and producing
about 850,000tons of gold-silver ore, the property was permanently abandoned in
April, 1942.
Since then little interest has been shown in the general mine area.
The last geological appraisal of the local mineralization was undertaken in 1966
for Falconbridge Nickel Mines Limited (Assessment Report 912) as a project conceived by Carl C. Wikstrom, of Hyder, Alaska.
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