Best mine exploration channel on KZbin. Only one I watch. Keep up the great work.
@TVRExploring8 ай бұрын
Thank you for the high praise!
@dirkhartman95728 ай бұрын
Love the old camp, nice to spend the night there with a small bonfire and a guitar
@TVRExploring8 ай бұрын
Indeed, it was! Except for the swarming Mormon crickets...
@timothymilam7328 ай бұрын
Amazing how they can do all the work to enforce the mine, stack all the gobbing, and then go as far as they did for little or nothing to show for they're efforts. Definitely didn't see anything that looked promising inside anywhere. Yet they had to have hit something in all of the different edits, are the stoppes that were evident from the looks of the upper parts of the mountain that had caved long ago. Plus the tram, as well as the supporting facilities that had once stood in the area. Interesting to see the old equipment, and that no one had vandalized the structures left standing Excellent adventure and appreciate the opportunity to see whatever you take us along for.
@karlfonner75898 ай бұрын
Fun fact, the price of aluminum was more expensive than the price of gold during the war two
@snarnok8 ай бұрын
It was also more expensive during the Napoleonic war. That was why they made the statue of Eros out of aluminium in Piccadilly, London.
@williamwintemberg8 ай бұрын
Cool explore! It's a shame fire removed so much outside. Nice timbering and lagging. Kind of strange the wood rail was removed and the iron strap was left behind. That's different. Nice cabin to stay the night. Thanks Justin and Crew!
@stevenhigby35128 ай бұрын
That is really cool to see all that still there. At least no one has shot up the place.
@davegrummett12638 ай бұрын
Hi Justin. It is definitely not surprising that unsupported parts would collapse. Bauxite and cryolite are both very soft. Between 1 and 3 on the mohs scale. Even serpentine is harder than bauxite and cryolite, and we know how sepentinite likes to cave in gold mines. Thanks for the video, as always. Hope you're not too snowed in out there, and all are safe.
@archstanton92068 ай бұрын
That was an interesting mine, incredible changes in the rock, we saw a lot of different geology in there. The "camp" buildings were very neat too, I love the stuff that documents the human side of the work, those guys were doing OK. That IR compressor was powered by a 4 cylinder flathead engine, looked to ave an updraft carb on the side of it, those flatheads were built into to 50s I believe. Spinning a hand crank is an art form these days. Hard to imagine that crank was SOP at one time, but so were manual transmissions and unheated seats...oh the humanity...
@SueGirling688 ай бұрын
Hi Justin, that was actually a pretty cool mine, the cabin looked really nice and comfortable, quite a bit of room too. Thank you for sharing, much love to you and the crew. xx
@TVRExploring8 ай бұрын
Thank you, Sue!
@SueGirling688 ай бұрын
@@TVRExploring ☺👌
@joshuajackson64428 ай бұрын
That was really enjoyable, thank you!
@ralphpatrick30718 ай бұрын
That mine appeared to be one huge exploratory. A lot of money invested in timbering and the tram all for not. That’s mining. Thanks, J!
@Benson_aka_devils_advocate_888 ай бұрын
There could be sections that have been lost to time and the elements, landslides, cave-ins, etc. Is it possible that they managed to find someone to finance a prospective dig with a bunch of infrastructure? Sure, wouldn't be the first, nor the last. But it's likely that parts of the mine were missed in this explore, or more likely that an adit has caved.
@TVRExploring8 ай бұрын
All of main adits and the shaft were caved. That is what I showed on the way up to the top adit...
@Jennifermcintyre8 ай бұрын
Wow! What a find!!
@OregonAuExploration8 ай бұрын
Im impressed, that the adit isn't collapsed. Good find!!
@TVRExploring8 ай бұрын
I was thinking that the top adit may have had the least ore (if any). The aluminum ore is very soft and crumbly, so that is likely why the adits and shaft with the good stuff may all have caved.
@-r-4958 ай бұрын
Sweet, a neat dwelling.
@randallosborne57478 ай бұрын
You are the Greatest Mine Explorer I have watched them all ypur the best by far I can't wait till next video your calling in life is to be a explorer and commentator. I was wondering if you ever kept many thing you found just wondering and you don't have to tell keep on keeping on I live Church Hill TN have a great day
@TVRExploring8 ай бұрын
Thank you very much for the kind words... Indeed, life does seem to have pulled me in that direction (and not just with the mine exploring). No, I never keep things that we come across. To me, their value is in the context in which they are found (which mine they were in, how the miners used them, where in the mine they were found). Once artifacts come out of the mine, they are just rusty junk that ends up in someone's garage or front yard and then the kids or grandkids eventually throw the artifacts out because, without any context, they are just rusty junk.
@rolfsinkgraven8 ай бұрын
A very interesting mountain made out 3 or four different types off mountain, guess some parts were stress too blast through tho, very much asking for timber, hope it was a money maker. nice buildings at the end.
@slimwantedman66948 ай бұрын
Good afternoon from Southeast South Dakota
@paulcooper91358 ай бұрын
Long adit with no stopes or anything ... just that one winze ... wonder if the lower ones were more successful... Thanks for sharing 🇨🇦
@TVRExploring8 ай бұрын
I would think so given the infrastructure that they had in place. Given that the top adit was intact, it may have had the least ore. The ore is very soft and crumbly, so the adits and shaft with the good stuff may all have caved.
@markhooper58248 ай бұрын
That was great you guys.👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
@redllyon51968 ай бұрын
Fan fiction: The walls of the mine were so well placed on the sides of the walls and ceiling, it wasn't a mine at all, but an escape tunnel for ancient humans from their alien overlords. The humans had slaved away building their structure and homes. As the rubble was piled up as refuse from the building, a band of escapees tunneled through all the rubble, right under the noses of the aliens. Thousands of years later, miners came in looking for gold and following tales of ancient alien antiquities, but after 200 feet of digging, their tunnels collapsed and they were trapped in an alternate reality. 100 years later a mine explorer turned up with his friends but all they could find was the remnants of past explorations. Little did he know, if he had dug through the back full, he would have opened the portal to an ancient civilization.
@The_Cultural_Historian_DrRGST8 ай бұрын
Another great video😎
@sierramountainsrailfanning21148 ай бұрын
Just wondering where would you be able to find/buy rail back then. Cool mine explore.
@bryanlong13638 ай бұрын
Thanks!😊
@David-jn4fx8 ай бұрын
What an awesome view man🤩
@TVRExploring8 ай бұрын
The views at many of these places are just phenomenal...
@alexreifschneider43328 ай бұрын
Incredible geology for that mine! The interior door lock is pre-1910.
@jimschnurr35128 ай бұрын
The side support beams are mostly old railroad ties. You can see the rail cutouts in them.
@Dave_95478 ай бұрын
The rock you kept showing us, with the small pockets looks like it is volcanic in origin. I would say basalt, but am probably wrong
@MrShotlighter8 ай бұрын
Didn't spot any basalt but I was thinking volcanic too.
@casedoumasr6568 ай бұрын
Hello Justin you say this may be a aluminum mine .I think the base mineral is called bastite (spelling ) in Washington state there are 2 very large mines one opened about 1970 by Addy Washington and this is my home state but thank you for the expore and the adventure nice cabin love your adventures ⛏️🤔
@derrelllipscomb6938 ай бұрын
That ground looked very rocky, loosely packed and highly unstable.
@TVRExploring8 ай бұрын
Indeed, it was!
@TalRohan8 ай бұрын
looks lie that bend of rail was left because it wouldn't go back out of the mine while still bendy lol The bat at 500ft seems to suggest you were near something that went to the surface..bats typically prefer to be near the surface for access...unless he was lost The geology of this mine is all over the place, although something did occur to me that around a fault there would typically be a broken side that took the majority of the force of the flat solid side moving against it. If it was very active minerals would be percolating up through the broken side leaving deposition and making for good mining but a really old or very young fault might have movement but no extra mineralisation, explaining the amount of broken sections in this mine.. I hope that make sense Cool place to stay Ingersoll Rand are still the rolls royce of air powered tooling.
@Davidautofull8 ай бұрын
i have that flashlight at 31:05. its an EDC so mine looks that worn too. everyone needs one in their pocket when they get to a certain age.
@scottherzog57468 ай бұрын
The unknown presence makes itself known again at the six minute 11 mark briefly flashing for a split second
@gailhowes93983 ай бұрын
What were they mining for considering the condition of the crumbling walls= any suggestions?
@blk77sunshn8 ай бұрын
All I have to say is CARBON TETRA-CHLORIDE......☠☠☠💀💀💀😎😎😎😎 When you were scanning that medicine cabinet and that bottle of carbon tetra-chloride popped into view, all I was thinking was somebody's into some heavy duty chemicals, that stuff was banned years ago, anyway great video as always!!!
@jeffgammon85798 ай бұрын
Did anyone else see the bat or bird at 17:01 come by him?
@kennys98558 ай бұрын
Something definitely flew by him.
@scottherzog57468 ай бұрын
Presents briefly flashed again at the 627 Mark
@uwillnevahno68378 ай бұрын
Is the cabin location one of those if you know you know deals? My kid is finally old enough to consider overnight camping and I'm at a loss to find places such as this one. I assume it's also a great spot for stargazing.
@doug68855 ай бұрын
Watch the video. Everything you need to know is in the cabin portion. A little pausing here and there and little Google Fu and I found it and the story of the family that used to use it in less than 5 minutes.
@bobrobert62778 ай бұрын
at 0:53 is a upsetter forging machine probably used to reforge the tips of the drill steel
@wideyxyz22718 ай бұрын
❤
@RussellNelson8 ай бұрын
22:05 "metal strips on top, cheaper than regular rail" yes, but not as durable.
@BossBrus-c7o8 ай бұрын
I believe all that stacked waste rock in a mine is called Gobbing
@scottherzog57468 ай бұрын
So you had company at the six minute mark unknown presence makes itself known in the form of a light orb
@derrelllipscomb6938 ай бұрын
My guess they ran out of men before they ran out of minerals mining there
@yeetyeet83658 ай бұрын
What are these rocks called or made of.
@stevesyverson86258 ай бұрын
At 5:23 it appears to be talc that has fallen to the floor from the hanging wall of the fault. It has a hardness of 1 on Mohs scale. At 7:03 it looks like vesicular basalt lava with the gas bubbles. At 10:49 the slickensides of the hanging wall appears to be stained with limonite, a low grade iron deposit. Anything yellow tends to be limonite with red being hematite.
@snarnok8 ай бұрын
Interesting graffiti at 10:20! Anyone know what is says in the middle... yo something (damp?) GFK?
@NewArcadian8 ай бұрын
'YOU DIRTY (YO [GFX]) DAMN THEIF'
@Inesophet8 ай бұрын
carbon tetrachloride ages that bottle to at most the late 1970's
@RussellNelson8 ай бұрын
21:21 "groundfall"? Why would the ground fall? Shouldn't this be called "ceiling fall"?
@RobSkeltz10 күн бұрын
At 5.48ish.. is the clearest shot of an equally old natural bandaid, still holding on!! 🩹lol .🖖🦘.