The News Life

Discovering Hidden Gems: Exploring Cache Creek’s Gold Treasures in Chaffee County, Colorado, USA

February 13, 2024 by Pham Hien

The first gold discoveries in Colorado were placer gold deposits. Cache Creek Park, a few miles west of the small town of Granite in northern Chaffee County, was one of these early gold discoveries. The gold of Cache Creek Park was discovered in 1859 (Parker, 1992), the same year gold was found by George A. Jackson along Chicago Creek on the present site of Idaho Springs and only a year after Green Russell’s discovery of a small gold placer near the confluence of the South Platte River and Cherry Creek that started the “Pikes Peak or Bust” gold rush (Chronology of Colorado History, Colorado State Archives, 2007, Davis and Streufert, 1990). These placer deposits not only started early gold rushes to Colorado but also led to rich vein strikes. Placer gold production of about 1,801,482 troy ounces has been recorded in 36 Colorado counties (Parker, 1974). Summit, Lake, Park, Clear Creek, Gilpin, and Chaffee Counties had the most significant placer deposits of Colorado (Parker, 1992).

FIGURE 1. Mining was in operation for nearly 60 years at Cache Creek, among the longest operated single placer deposit in Colorado.  A BLM gate is open, allowing access to these present-day goldfields.  Photo date 9/2007 by S. Veatch.

Cache Creek Park produced over 49,000 ounces of gold—most of Chaffee County’s production (over $1 million at the old value of $20.67 per ounce). The area was worked by individual prospectors and small outfits from1859 until 1883 (figure 2). Starting in 1884, Cache Creek was worked as a large hydraulic mining operation—Colorado’s only profitable one—by several English firms. Mining operations continued until 1911 when mining was shut down in one of Colorado’s first environmental lawsuits. Since then there has been only intermittent small-scale placer mining (Parker, 1974). Most Colorado gold placers, produced by natural gravity concentration, were formed during the last Ice Age (the Pleistocene Epoch). Only a few placers were formed earlier, such as the late Eocene or early Oligocene Castle Rock Conglomerate (Parker, 1992). The earliest glacial period in Colorado is the pre-Bull Lake, followed by the Bull Lake. The last pulse of glaciation is known as the Pinedale. These names are from sites in Wyoming. Almost all of the Pleistocene placers in Colorado have been affected by either Bull Lake or Pinedale age glaciations, which altered or destroyed any earlier glacial deposits. Gold was concentrated by glacial melt water action and is often found near terminal moraines. Moraines are glacially formed accumulations of unconsolidated debris deposited where the glacier melted. These debris range from silt-like glacial flour to large boulders. Terminal or end moraines are ridges of unconsolidated debris deposited at the end of a glacier. Cache Creek Park was an outwash terrace of lower Bull Lake age; its gravels contained two sources of gold: 1) from the west or southwest, probably Lost Canyon Creek, and 2) the moraines of Lake Creek. In upper Bull Lake time these gravels were reworked by streams which brought in more gold from both of these two sources. The gold deposits of Cache Creek are found in placer gravels up to 61 feet high that are bordered on the north by the Bull Lake terminal moraine of the Lake Creek glacier and bordered on the west by Lost Canyon Mountain and on the east by a granite ridge (Parker, 1992). There is a bench about midway in the gravel: cobbles and boulders above it are less weathered than those beneath it, suggesting that the rocks below the bench were weathered for a much longer time. The gravel below the bench is lower Bull lake outwash; gravel above the bench is upper Bull Lake outwash. The bench is not present in all the parts of the gravel and reveals that the early Bull Lake outwash streams did not flow over the entire Park but were restricted to limited channels (Parker, 1992). Since the time major mining operations ended, the natural recovery of the Cache Creek area is slowly occurring. The Bureau of Land Management (BLM) manages the Cache Creek area for wildlife habitat, wetlands, and open space. Although the BLM has withdrawn the area from mineral entry, it has recognized Cache Creek’s important place in Colorado’s mining history and allows placer mining that minimizes impacts to the area. The BLM field office has established a 25 acre area for motorized placer mining. A permit from the local BLM office is required. The remaining BLM lands in the Cache Creek area are available for non-motorized placer mining, including pans, sluice boxes, and battery-operated re-circulators. The recreational placer season is limited to Memorial Day to November 30 of each year and limited to ten user days in order to minimize impacts to wildlife habitat. The Cache Creek area has been of interest to the small-scale prospectors because of the placer gold that was left behind when mining operations ended in 1911.

 

Today there has been renewed interest in this locality. Most weekends at Cache Creek look like scenes from the historic California Gold Rush: prospectors are crowded along every foot of the creek working the gold-bearing gravels with all sorts of equipment. Prospectors are busy on weekends shoveling source material—from banks above a gray and orange clay layer—into 5-gallon plastic buckets. This material is put through screens and then worked by sluice boxes or gold pans. Pay streaks of gold are commonly seen in pans. Novice and experienced prospectors (figures 2, 3, 4, and 5) always find gold and a lot of fun at Cache Creek. The beautiful landscape of this area is an added bonus and enhances the recreational prospecting experience. Respecting the land and environment at this popular location will ensure that the BLM will continue to keep this area open for prospecting for years to come.

FIGURE 2.  Paul McRae, Shirley Weilnau, and Paul Yeisley take a break from their sluice box on Cache Creek.  Photo date 7/2008 by S. Veatch.
FIGURE 3.  A seasoned prospector is screening gold-bearing sediment from nearby glacial deposits. Photo date 7/2008 by S. Veatch.
FIGURE 4  Larry Weilnau is carefully inspecting gold nuggets in his pan. Photo date 7/2008 by S. Veatch
FIGURE 5.  Patrick Hill (left) and Luther Brown (right) are members of the Gold Prospectors of Colorado.  Here they are running an effective panning operation on Cache Creek.  The native gold has been concentrated by gravity concentration.  Photo date 9/2007 by S. Veatch.

(Information on BLM rules at Cache Creek and a copy of the permit

References Cited:

Armour, J., Fawcett, P.J. and Geissman, J.W. 2002. 15 k.y. paleoclimatic and glacial record from northern New Mexico. Geology 30(8):723-726. Chronology of Colorado History. Retrieved October 11, 2007, from Colorado State Archives Web site: http://www.colorado.gov/dpa/doit/archives/ Davis, M.W., and R. K. Streufert, 1990, Gold Occurrences of Colorado., Resource Series 28: Colorado Geological Survey, Denver, Colorado, 101 p Parker, B.H., Jr. 1974, Gold placers of Colorado (2 volumes). Colorado School of Mines Quarterly, v. 69, no. 3, 492 p. Parker, B.H., Jr. 1992. Gold panning and placering in Colorado: How and where, Information Series 33: Colorado Geological Survey, Denver, Colorado, 83 p. Richmond, G.M. 1965. Glaciation of the Rocky Mountains. in, Wright, H.E. Jr. and Frey, D.G. (eds.), The Quaternary of the United States, p. 217-230. Princeton University Press, Princeton, New Jersey.

Richmond, G.M. 1986. Stratigraphy and correlation of glacial deposits of the Rocky Mountains, the Colorado Plateau, and the ranges of the Great Basin. in, Sibrava, V., Bowen, D.Q. and Richmond, G.M. (eds.), Quaternary glaciations in the northern hemisphere, p. 99-127. Pergamon Press, Oxford & New York.

 

Filed Under: Gold

Primary Sidebar

Recent Posts

  • UNBELIEVABLE MOVE: Detroit Tigers Star Tarik Skubal Just Turned Down $45 Million from Mark Zuckerberg — But What He Said Next About America, Inequality, and What Truly Matters in Life Might Be the Most Powerful Thing Baseball Has Heard All Year.nh1
  • BREAKING: SF Giants Are Now at a Tense and Unavoidable Crossroads with Justin Verlander — Why His Next Start Might Be His Last in San Francisco, and the Silent Rift Growing Inside the Clubhouse That No One’s Talking About (Until Now).nh1
  • BREAKING NEWS: Alex Cora has shocked the world and the American media when she accepted Mark Zuckerberg’s $45 million advertising offer to prepare for the launch of a new campaign called “Cora Cares Initiative” to help disadvantaged children in Boston.nh1
  • BREAKING: Red Sox Just Walked Into Wrigley and Silenced the Cubs — What Happened in the Final Inning, the Hug at the Ivy Wall, and the Message from Cora in the Dugout Might Be the Turning Point of the Season.nh1
  • AMAZING NEWS: Aaron Judge Gives Baseball and Hope to Boy Who Survived Ruidoso Wildfire After pouring his heart and soul into Texas, Aaron Judge wasn’t done yet. When the raging fire burned down the town of Ruidoso, New Mexico—taking away homes, forests, and the childhoods of thousands of children—he quietly showed up. Not in a Yankees uniform, but with… a bat, a bracelet, and his eyes fixed on little Liam—a kid who lost both his father and his beloved ballpark overnight..nh1

Recent Comments

  1. A WordPress Commenter on Hello world!

Copyright © 2025 · Paradise on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in