Mount Diablo mercury deposits

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
William E. Motzer ◽  
David A. Mustart

ABSTRACT The California Coast Ranges mercury deposits are part of the western North America mercury belt, in which mercury occurs most commonly as red cinnabar (α-HgS), sometimes associated with its high-temperature polymorph, metacinnabar (β-HgS). In the Coast Ranges, ores were deposited from hydrothermal solutions and range in age from Miocene to Holocene. Ore deposition at Mount Diablo generally occurred along active faults and associated extension fractures in the Franciscan complex, most often in serpentinite that had been hydrothermally altered to silica-carbonate rock. The Mount Diablo mine lies ~48 km (~30 miles) northeast of San Francisco in Contra Costa County and is mineralogically unique in California, because metacinnabar, the higher-temperature polymorph of mercury sulfide, is a major primary ore mineral in the deposit, while at all other mercury mines in California, it is quite rare. In addition, hydrothermal activity is so recent that sulfurous gases and methane continued to be released into the mine at least into the 1940s. Historically, long before active large-scale mining began in the 1800s, the Mount Diablo mercury deposits were known to the Indigenous people of the Ohlone tribes, who used the cinnabar in rituals as well as for red pigment to decorate their bodies, and as a prized trade item. The deposit was later rediscovered in 1863 and mined intermittently until 1958. The Mount Diablo mine and adjacent Rhyne (also variously spelled Ryne or Rhine) mine were the sites of most of the mercury operations in the region, and at both mines, mercury ore occurs in structurally controlled lenticular bodies of silica-carbonate rock and serpentinite. The total district production probably exceeded 12,300 flasks (at 76 pounds or ~34.5 kg per flask) at an estimated grade of 2711 g per metric ton. Low-grade ore reserves are believed to still exist, with 17,000 short tons of indicated and inferred ore. Other minor deposits of copper, silver, and gold occur on Mount Diablo, principally in and around Eagle Peak, but mercury is not associated with these deposits.

Author(s):  
Earl B. Alexander ◽  
Roger G. Coleman ◽  
Todd Keeler-Wolfe ◽  
Susan P. Harrison

The Northern California Coast Ranges domain is in a mountainous region in which most of the mountain ranges are aligned north–south, or more precisely north, northwest– south southeast, curving around the Klamath Mountains into Oregon where the domain branches to north–south and northeast–southwest trends on the northwest side of the Klamath Mountains. It extends about 600km from the Golden Gate at the entrance to San Francisco Bay north to about the Coquille River in Coos County and nearly to the North Umqua River in Douglas County, Oregon. The domain corresponds to a physiographic region that is bounded by the Pacific Ocean on the west, the Coast Range of Oregon and Washington (Orr and Orr 1996) on the north, the Klamath Mountains on the northeast, the Great Valley of California on the southeast, and on the south by the drainage outlet of the Sacramento and San Joaquin rivers through the Carquinas Straight and San Pablo Bay. Serpentine is scattered in relatively small ultramafic bodies throughout the Northern California Coast Ranges and is concentrated along some of the major faults. For 200 or 300 km south from the Klamath Mountains, the Northern California Coast Ranges region is a rectangular strip 90–110 km wide between the Ocean and the Great Valley of California. The Klamath Mountains crowd the region to a narrow strip only 10 or 12 km wide in Del Norte County. Most of the mountain ranges have approximately concordant summits that are tilted up toward the east–northeast. Therefore, the highest altitudes are on the east, just south of the Klamath Mountains. North Yolla Bolly at 2397 m (7865 feet) and South Yolla Bolly at 2466 m (8092 feet) have the highest summits. Both of these and some neighboring mountains have cirques and moraines indicative of glaciation on their north slopes. There is no evidence of glaciation in any areas with serpentine rocks. Only the Rogue and Klamath rivers cut from east to west all of the way across the Northern California Coast Ranges, except for a few smaller streams such as the Chetco and Smith rivers that have headwaters in the Klamath Mountains.


Author(s):  
Earl B. Alexander ◽  
Roger G. Coleman ◽  
Todd Keeler-Wolfe ◽  
Susan P. Harrison

The Southern California Coast Range domain is a mountainous region with subparallel ridges aligned north–south, or more precisely north, northwest–south, southeast, and with intervening valleys that are controlled by strike-slip faulting. It extends about 400 km from the Golden Gate at the entrance to San Francisco Bay south to the Transverse Ranges that have east–west trending ridges. The domain corresponds to a physiographic region about 400 km long and 100 km wide that is bound by the Pacific Ocean on the west, the Great Valley of California on the east, on the north by the drainage outlet of the Sacramento and San Joaquin Rivers through the Carquinas Straight and San Pablo Bay, and on the south by the Transverse Ranges. Ridges in the Southern California Coast Ranges generally have nearly level crests (Page et al. 1997), but they range considerably in height up to about 1500 m on some of the higher peaks. No streams from the Great Valley cross the Southern California Coast Ranges to the Ocean; the Great Valley drains through the Carquinez Straight and Golden Gate at the north end of these ranges. The larger streams in the Southern California Coast Ranges drain from the Santa Clara Valley, Salinas Valley, and Cuyama Valley to the San Francisco, Monterey, and San Luis Obispo bays. Only relatively small streams drain to the Great Valley, but some of them have large alluvial fans in the valley. There are many Tertiary-faultbound valleys and basins among the mountain ranges. Some of the more prominent basins are the Santa Maria basin, Carrizo Plains, Paso Robles basin, and Watsonville basin. Serpentine is scattered in relatively small bodies throughout the domain and is concentrated along some of the major faults and in the New Idria area (locality 3-12). Climates range from cool and foggy along the coast to warm inland, with hot and dry summers inland from the fog belt.


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