Historical Archaeology of the Big Five Gold Mine: Excavations Along Bitter Creek, Northeast of the Town of Red River, Taos County, New Mexico
Book Details
Author(s)Michael S. Burney
PublisherLAP LAMBERT Academic Publishing
ISBN / ASIN3659513237
ISBN-139783659513237
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank3,968,092
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸
Description
As early as 1866, a gold rush high in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains of northern New Mexico lured men, and a few women, to seek their fortunes in a remote landscape as rugged as it was breathtakingly beautiful. This northern territory of New Spain had long ago been gifted to a chosen few through Spanish and Mexican land grants encompassing vast portions of northern New Mexico. Predominantly inhabited by Jicarilla Apaches, Utes, Pueblo Indians, and Hispanic settlers, the high-mountain valleys around the small Anglo community of Red River north of Taos would evolve into a Wild West mining boomtown of the American Southwest. Bitter Creek was one of the narrow, heavily forested valleys above Red River in the Red River gold-mining district. The “Big Five†was one of several mines. Thought to have yielded a rich bounty of gold as early as 1858, the Big Five was prospected in 1890 with poor results. In 1921, however, it became a working gold mine employing a waterwheel power plant. The miners, mining technology, crude living conditions, and domestic and industrial artifacts are resurrected through historical written records and archaeological excavations undertaken above 10,000 feet.
