1054

Imperial Pit Gold Specimen

Currency:USD Category:Collectibles / Rocks, Fossils & Minerals Start Price:100.00 USD Estimated At:200.00 - 400.00 USD
Imperial Pit Gold Specimen
SOLD
100.00USDto e*****3+ buyer's premium (17.50)
This item SOLD at 2016 Dec 09 @ 10:10UTC-8 : PST/AKDT
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Gold in hand specimen from the Comstock, collected by a major Nevada gold geologist. One specimen from the Imperial Mine, along the Comstock in Gold Hill. Contains gold, electrum, pyrite. 3.25 x 2 x 1/8" Very thin.

This lot begins our offering of Comstock ore specimens from Gold Hill and Virginia City. Please enjoy this brief Comstock history:

Virginia City and the Comstock Mining District yielded enough gold and silver to shake the world, affecting European monetary policy and helping to keep the federal government solvent during the Civil War.

The first big strikes in 1859 signaled the discovery of some of the richest ore ever found. For example, the 1873 discovery of the ‘Big Bonanza’ was a massive ore body composed of nearly solid silver and gold. The Comstock Mining District produced over $300 million with some reports near or exceeding $400 million. The price of gold at the time was between $18 and $19 per ounce and silver was between $1 and $1.29 per ounce. At today’s metal prices the dollar figures produced from the District would be in the multi-billions.

The principal silver ores were in the form of sulfides and sulfosalts, including argentite, polybasite, stephanite, and pyrargerite. Native silver was also present, but not abundant. Gold was found in free form, as well as, disseminated in quartz. Pyrite was also common in the ore. The Ophir and Gould and Curry bonanzas contained some galena, sphalerite, antimony, and copper sulfides. The ore from the Gold Hill section, in contrast, was almost free from base metals.

Much of the bullion produced from the mines was shipped to the United States mint in Carson City, built in 1869. Because a spur of the V& T (Virginia City and Truckee) Railroad led directly to the mint, it was possible to ship bullion securely from the mill to the mint. Although the U.S. government purchased most of the gold and silver mined in the District, the ‘CC’ mintmark is coveted by coin collectors due to its relative rarity and the fact that the metal came from the world famous Comstock Lode.

Information given above came from the following sources:

Smith, G. with new material by Joseph Tingley. The History of the Comstock Lode, 1850-1997. Reno: Nevada Bureau of Mines and Geology in association with the University of Nevada Press, 1998.

James, R.M. and James S.A. Images of America: Virginia City and the Big Bonanza. Charleston: Arcadia Publishing, 2009.
State: Nevada City: Gold Hill Date: FHWAC#: 43712