Awesome Color Show In An Abandoned Mine

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  • Опубликовано: 18 окт 2024

Комментарии • 468

  • @ThomasConlon-Wind-Power-Pro
    @ThomasConlon-Wind-Power-Pro 5 лет назад +61

    The question you should ask yourself. Was the mine ordered closed at the start of the war? If so, short drifts filed with waste rock, or even ore especially near the mouth of the tunnel should be checked with a metal detector. Such mines quickly closed as the money quickly drained away. Miners, especially in small privately owned mines, would stash their tools safely before leaving. They were planning on returning very soon. Some thought the war would be over in a few months. Many never returned. Often, they placed their tools in a small drift and covered them with waste rock and sometimes under a few pieces of corrugated metal sheeting. I have found jackleg drills, jackhammers, small jaw crushers, winches, flasks of mercury, blasting machines, stationary engines and old carbide barrels filled with carbide lamps, small tools and even a beautiful old Brunton compass that I still use regularly! The old-timers were very smart and hid things very well for the day they returned.
    Also, sometimes much can be learned from claim papers if they are still in the location marker. Names of the locator and other details were recorded and these papers were often placed in a Prince Albert tobacco can (glass jars break) and rocks stacked up around the can.
    In 1967, one old mine I dug open the opening enough to get in had been blasted shut. I climbed in and found four old style oil drums filled with gasoline. I crawled across the top of the drums and dropped down inside the tunnel and found something interesting. Six cases of dynamite with wiles coming out of the tops of the boxes and wired to a big old car battery and then going to a coffee can with an old knife switch in it nailed next to where the tunnel has done had been. I turned seven shades of red as I figured out that the tunnel was very well booby-trapped and the target was me! I quickly pulled out my pocket knife and shorted out the leads from the cases of dynamite, testing them together. I found out later that the battery was completely dead. Had frozen and cracked the case and lost all its juice! All was safe. I was very impressed that the tunnel had been blasted shut without setting off the booby-trap. That was a real skill!
    I could tell a long story about this mine. A very long story, but I won't. Just be very careful! in old mines. Many were shut down by men who planned to come back and they didn't want others to know what they were leaving behind.

    • @TVRExploring
      @TVRExploring  5 лет назад +19

      Well, even if you don't share your long story, your short one was very good... That's an impressive list of treasures you've found underground.

    • @ChrisLarsen760
      @ChrisLarsen760 5 лет назад +9

      You're an awesome story-teller - I had no problem getting a clear picture in my head of what you experienced. Thanks for sharing your story - good stuff right here..

    • @Ronaldalan114
      @Ronaldalan114 5 лет назад +3

      Do you have a channel? I wanna follow you haha

    • @GetFaithified
      @GetFaithified 5 лет назад +2

      Hey i know im late could you make a video about the full story? Or write it here? It sounds interesting

    • @outkast0424
      @outkast0424 4 года назад +1

      @@TVRExploring do you check seismometer information from local geological surveys before you go on your explorations? Watching you come up on that half collapsed set of timbers made my heart jump into my throat and my stomach to turn... I don't even get that from watching people do parkour on skyscraper ledges...

  • @richardrobertson1331
    @richardrobertson1331 6 лет назад +72

    So glad you were able to photograph the active process of stout timbers in compression failure and be alive to tell about it. So dangerous, but so interesting at the same time. Because of that alone, I consider this to be one of your best videos! This video should be shared with everyone with even the slightest interest in mining and minerals. Truly a rare glimpse reminding all of us of the massive forces at work. A short video of that segment, alone, with a brief discussion highlighting our need for minerals and the dangers involved would certainly go viral. Excellent video, thanks for sharing. Stay safe, my friend.

    • @TVRExploring
      @TVRExploring  6 лет назад +9

      Thank you very much. Yes, I have never seen timbers stressed to that point before complete failure before. It was sporty, but I'm glad I had the chance to see it. Like you said, certainly massive forces at work... Those timbers don't stand a chance against the entire mountain around them.

    • @RICDirector
      @RICDirector 5 лет назад +3

      @@FingerinUrDaughter If Louis L'Amour had it right (and he usually did), timber collapse was a common problem in the Comstock silver mines, but that was from clay pushing in--they were very wet mines with a chronic drainage and mud problem....so I don't know for sure if that would apply here, it looks pretty dry.
      Suspect you are more correct on this one. :) LOVE this stuff!!

    • @nickbeam5432
      @nickbeam5432 5 лет назад +1

      @vin 950 EARTHQUAKES

    • @michalhowling3702
      @michalhowling3702 3 года назад +1

      @@RICDirector holy smokes.. Louis lamour, I don't know anyone else who has actually read his books. I have read at least 70 of them myself.

  • @c103110a
    @c103110a 4 года назад +7

    27:07 I didn't think he was going for it - and he did. Amazing stuff.

  • @philsergent1913
    @philsergent1913 5 лет назад +21

    In the very sketchy bowing-in section, weren't you afraid that the clanking of your brass balls might cause a cave in?

  • @kathyculwell1282
    @kathyculwell1282 5 лет назад +4

    Ooooo-M-G!!! I need a piece of that gorgeous blue rock in my life!! What a thrilling life you live!! Thank you for taking us on these amazing adventures with you! I'm so happy I found your channel.

    • @TVRExploring
      @TVRExploring  5 лет назад +1

      Thank you, Kathy, for the kind words and for watching. I'm glad you found the channel as well!

  • @leesherman100
    @leesherman100 6 лет назад +3

    One of your best "works" that I've seen. This vid has it all. Magnificent colors, terror, early and late timbering, and those ladders that must travel to the stairway to heaven, or is it hell? You are one bad hombre! Ya got me hooked on this.

    • @TVRExploring
      @TVRExploring  6 лет назад

      Haha, thank you! Yes, this mine instantly became one of my favorites.

  • @oxskirra
    @oxskirra 6 лет назад +1

    Wow , thats a impressive mine both in colors and timbering, glad you could share that.

    • @TVRExploring
      @TVRExploring  6 лет назад +1

      Yes, I was pretty impressed with this one as well. There was a lot going on!

  • @pauloneill9965
    @pauloneill9965 6 лет назад +4

    It's amazing wats under our feet them minerals wow. Them tunnels was long how they know to go the ways did to find wat ever material orr chasing. Cool explore mine didn't look as old till saw them timbers that was used from something else. Stay safe look forward to nxt vid take care from Ireland👍☘🇮🇪

    • @TVRExploring
      @TVRExploring  6 лет назад +2

      Thank you for the good wishes from Ireland. Today, miners use drilling, aerial surveys, etc. to plot out where to find the minerals they are after. The old timers didn't have those benefits though and so a lot of it came down to reading the rock properly to know how to proceed. And, of course, a fair amount of luck... This mine dates back to the 1800s, but it was obviously rehabbed more recently as could be seen with those timber supports that were in good shape.

  • @richardbidinger2577
    @richardbidinger2577 6 лет назад +1

    One of the best videos so far. I was surprised you went through the bad section. We've watched you go through some bad mines, but that one section in this one was crazy. I'd have turned around at that point. That went beyond sketchy. Glad you made it out. Makes me a lot more aware of the kind of danger, you and all the others that do this, face each time you go in one of these places. Out of all honesty, at one point, I realized I was holding my breath while you were going through that bad section, had to giggle a little at that one. Keep these great videos coming.

    • @TVRExploring
      @TVRExploring  6 лет назад

      As always, thanks for a great comment... Yes, this mine instantly became one of my favorites as well. Those timbers toward the end were very sketchy, but I have a problem with always wanting to know what is around the next bend. Haha, and, trust me, I was holding my breath through that section as well!

  • @kevingarrett8403
    @kevingarrett8403 5 лет назад +1

    I would have never gone past that "sketchy" section. Who am I kidding? I'd have never gone inside at all! That's for sharing. Glad you made it out to post this.

  • @MinesoftheWest
    @MinesoftheWest 6 лет назад +25

    That was a really neat mine! Loved the geology and the nice timber sets. The section of timbers at 27:00 was pretty wild, I wonder if an earthquake caused all that damage. Great job man!

    • @TVRExploring
      @TVRExploring  6 лет назад +10

      Thank you. This one is not far from some of the mines you and I have checked out... I was also wondering if an earthquake caused the damage to the timber sets toward the end as the pressure on them was different than what I am used to (which is material coming down from above rather than from the sides). I'm usually looking down when I go through a mine so that I don't take an unexpected trip down a winze. So, when I looked up and saw all of those colors directly overhead, I was pretty impressed.

    • @RICDirector
      @RICDirector 5 лет назад +1

      @Frank Roberts Now that's a thought. Wonder where this one was...

    • @vapormissile
      @vapormissile 5 лет назад +1

      "No WAY I'm going up that," when ten feet back @ the scary timbers, I had just finished literally saying "No WAY he's going through that."

  • @philhohnen6193
    @philhohnen6193 5 лет назад +8

    A beautifully timbered mine in unstable, fault-affected , highly jointed rock. Plenty of gypsum crystals, azurite with some malachite and was that chalcopyrite you panned past? Great vid thanks! No groundwater either...

  • @markrobinson6848
    @markrobinson6848 6 лет назад +3

    Great video.
    The blue mineral is Azurite. It is a soft, deep blue copper mineral produced by weathering of copper ore deposits. In the early 19th century, it was also known as chessylite .
    Azurite is one of the two basic copper(II) carbonate minerals, the other being bright green malachite.
    Cheers and keep up the great work.

  • @poisonivy5737
    @poisonivy5737 5 лет назад +2

    OMG! I came across your video's and totally amazing! I have never seen an abandoned mine from this viewpoint! Thank you so much for this learning experience! I look forward to watching new videos. Maybe one day, I will get enough courage to go exploring the caverns and mines. Thank you again!

  • @BigSkyBowler
    @BigSkyBowler 5 лет назад +2

    dude... props to going through that section under pressure. Brave!

  • @UpcycleElectronics
    @UpcycleElectronics 6 лет назад +2

    Dude your crazy for going through that mess. Be safe. Thanks for the upload.
    -Jake

  • @braaptism6297
    @braaptism6297 5 лет назад +4

    I would be filling a bag to take home. Beautiful minerals.

  • @solohoh
    @solohoh 6 лет назад +1

    Thanks for documenting this mine, videos like this will be all we have soon.

    • @TVRExploring
      @TVRExploring  6 лет назад

      Yes, unfortunately, you are right about that.

  • @nhragold1922
    @nhragold1922 6 лет назад +10

    Azurite is so beautiful! Looks like great mineralization! I'd sample that

  • @gingerbread6614
    @gingerbread6614 6 лет назад +4

    This was a great video, your great handling the camera & walking along. Thank you

  • @chrisackerley1842
    @chrisackerley1842 4 года назад

    Justin - I've watched most of your videos. You've explored some truly scary mines, but the drift you tiptoed down at 27:59 is by far the scariest! I would have been afraid to fart for fear the whole place would come down on me! My compliments! It took some big brass ones to keep going down that passage!

    • @TVRExploring
      @TVRExploring  4 года назад

      Trust me, I felt the same way squeezing past those splintered timbers! I swear you could feel the tension they were under in the air there...

  • @thedigitalmoezone
    @thedigitalmoezone 5 лет назад +1

    Amazing views from within and just slightly below the surface... reminds me of The City of Angels..Carlton smokes, the spray paint brand, the results of ground shift on the timber sets... incredible what one can find on this beautiful planet called home. Fortunately, you seem to enjoy and make time to bring the earthly veins from below to share with us surface dwellers. Well done Good Sir and Thank You!!

  • @tangledshoelace4726
    @tangledshoelace4726 5 лет назад

    Wow!! That was a nail biter!! Amazing colors!!!😁😀💗💙

    • @TVRExploring
      @TVRExploring  5 лет назад

      Yes, those colors were phenomenal. Haha, and, yes, I assure you that it was somewhat tense squeezing between those splintered support timbers!

  • @ancientexploringarizona
    @ancientexploringarizona 4 года назад

    YIKES!! The section of broken timber's had me yelling at my phone, "Don't go through there"!! LOL. Seriously though, another amazing video sir, I'm envious..

  • @QuaaludeCharlie
    @QuaaludeCharlie 5 лет назад +2

    Thank You for taking the Risk to Show folks these Mines . I Hope you found Gold and Gems , Thumbs Upand Shared :) QC

  • @BluAngel53
    @BluAngel53 6 лет назад

    Thank you for the amazing video. All the beautiful colors and I must admit I was holding my breath when you went through the bad section! Thanks again and I look forward to your next video.

    • @TVRExploring
      @TVRExploring  6 лет назад +2

      Thank you very much. Ha, you weren't the only one holding their breath when going through that sporty section!

  • @grantrennie
    @grantrennie 5 лет назад +1

    That mine has been explored between 1999 and 2002, the white 8 hour lightstick on the floor at 2:04 next to the rails on the tunnel floor (brownish liquid inside) went out of production around early 2002 and was replaced by a different tube type/model, the few manufacturers that there are in the world only make lightsticks with some type of plastic hook or another nowadays (glowstick, snap light, chemlight, lightstick - chemical light in a plastic tube where the second solution is in a glass tube inside and bending it breaks the glass and mixes the two chemical blends resulting in a bright glow)

  • @stanleystrycharz2572
    @stanleystrycharz2572 6 лет назад

    What an awesome mine! The variety of minerals is amazing. Some of the ground in there looked soft and unstable. Gypsum is often prone to collapse. You did a great job documenting this one for sure. Every video you post is a new adventure. Thanks so much for making these. This mine looks as if it was worked fairly recently with what type of materials are in there and how good all the left over equipment looks. Plus the plastic buckets are a dead giveaway! The splintering timbers gave me chills. I can just imagine the pressure that they are under. You are quite brave going into that section!! Keep up the great videos.

    • @TVRExploring
      @TVRExploring  6 лет назад

      Thank you! This mine is pretty old, but has been worked off and on for decades, which is why you have the mix of new and old workings and equipment. Ha, yes, I wasn't a big fan of being in that section with the shattered timbers!

  • @cjsoutdoors4412
    @cjsoutdoors4412 6 лет назад

    Wow!... What a neat mine! Especially all the nice timbers in the beginning. Awesome blue rocks and crystal too!

    • @TVRExploring
      @TVRExploring  6 лет назад +1

      Thank you. Yes, this turned out to be a great one...

  • @DFDuck55
    @DFDuck55 6 лет назад +17

    The air tank was riveted so pre 1920. Most of the rails looks like they were reused, then you got into older sections where the rail had been removed, so that kind of verified they were reusing the rails. The phone number on that bit of newspaper was a clue to it's age; REpublic 2-6261. Not that I remember when they quit using words like that for telephone prefixes. I remember them still being in use in the 1950's. Carlton cigarettes were made by American Tobacco Company and were known as having the lowest tar and nicotine of any cigarette. I "think" Carlton was acquired by R.J. Reynolds in the late 1980's. Another clue to it's age, if someone really wanted to dig that deep, would be the wordage of the warning label on it. -- Awesome mine explore. I could have probably spent some hours just photographing the gypsum crystals and the blue stuff. Then my mind drifted... similar to the tree falling in the woods conundrum..., is it still blue if no one is there to see it? Since color is the reflection of light, and there is no light in there when there are no people with flashlights.

    • @TVRExploring
      @TVRExploring  6 лет назад +2

      Thank you for the breakdown on the various clues you saw like the air tank and the phone number. This is an old mine, but, obviously, there has been some off and on activity over the decades. I thought this was a cool one too - there was a lot going on! Interesting observation about the blue... A tree falling in the woods makes sound waves even if no one is there to hear them. However, you're absolutely right about no light = no color. So, yes, I'd have to say that technically it does not exist without someone there with a flashlight to see it.

    • @wygold
      @wygold 6 лет назад +5

      The pack of cigarettes looks to date around mid 70’s. There is no bar code on the pack of cigarettes and the warning label on the side of the pack which tobacco companies voluntarily started putting warning labels on in 1971, even though the federal government mandated warning labels on all tobacco products in 1966. It wasn’t until 1973 when the federal government again mandated warning labels to include “toxic substances”, which by that time all tobacco companies were putting warning labels on all tobacco products and were banned from advertising on T.V. & Radio the same year even though they continued to advertise in newspapers and magazines until the late 90’s. So if it that pack said “toxic substances” then It dates between 1973 thru the first part the 1980’s. Carlton Cigarettes was made by Brown & Williamson during the late 1890’s and sold to British Tobacco Company in 1927 which also acquired American Tobacco Company in the early 1900’s, and continued to operate under American Tobacco Company until it was restructured in 1969 at which time the company formed into American Brands, Inc. and continued to operated American Tobacco. The Carlton Cigarettes brand was then sold back to Brown & Williamson in 1994. Then R.J. Reynolds merged with Brown & Williamson in 2004. I have tried this brand before back in the late 1990’s when I couldn’t afford to pay $1.50 for a pack of Marlboros and all I remember about this brand was it was to difficult to smoke. And yes I did do a little research on this pack before commenting.

    • @tomkenney5365
      @tomkenney5365 5 лет назад +1

      I remember them using words in phone numbers in the earliest ads I remember, so, mid-60s, but I'm pretty sure that was out of use by 1970.

  • @Seat1AJoe
    @Seat1AJoe 4 года назад

    Love the colors in this mine!

  • @johncarold
    @johncarold 5 лет назад

    Hi Justin love watching this episode over again and finding new stuff and this time is no example, Growing up in high school I studied electronics and after I worked at Payless TV as a repairman for RCA. and in the news paper, RCA is asking for engineers, back then that's what I studied, funny.

  • @garrettsalter8338
    @garrettsalter8338 5 лет назад

    Fantastic. Little bit on the sketchy side going past that one area. Pucker factor 1000 percent. Glad you made it.

  • @jonesfactor9
    @jonesfactor9 5 лет назад +1

    Awesome blue!
    Wish I could find big mines like this to explore

    • @TVRExploring
      @TVRExploring  5 лет назад

      Yes, those colors were awesome. I had no idea that I would encounter something like that...

  • @worldtraveler930
    @worldtraveler930 6 лет назад +6

    This is a Wicked Cool mine!

  • @strietermarinesurvey1415
    @strietermarinesurvey1415 6 лет назад +1

    Had to watch it twice great footage! Keep up the awesome work! Be careful that looked real sketchy! Thank you!!

  • @ltr4300
    @ltr4300 5 лет назад

    As much as I enjoy vicariously being a part of something sketchy and amazing, I truly hope that you do this because you WANT to, not because you feel any kind of false pressure now to outdo yourself or because you feel like the viewers expect it now....like when I watch storm chasers I do so without guilt because given the chance, I would and have done it myself, I have a fascination with severe weather and tornadoes but I wouldn't say that I'm fearless of it, quite the opposite...it's just that my curiosity about it overrules my sometimes weaker than average sense of self-preservation.

    • @TVRExploring
      @TVRExploring  5 лет назад

      That's an interesting comparison to the psychology of the storm chasers. Your last sentence sums things up perfectly for me - "my curiosity about it overrules my sometimes weaker than average sense of self-preservation." Very well said...

  • @boringpolitician
    @boringpolitician 6 лет назад +7

    I appreciate all the exploring, and sharing it all with us. Thank you! But please, please, please... I'd rather have you live another day to shoot some more mines than take death risks. It's nice, it's not important. You have so much respect for leaving things as they were. Thank you for all the proper exploring! But, again, don't risk your life! Please!

  • @MaryOKC
    @MaryOKC 5 лет назад

    The “drill steel” ☺️ is a Drill bit for pneumatic jack leg...used to drill holes for blasting...they pack those holes with dynamite and at the end of the day they “blow the hole” ... then in the morning they “muck” it into the chutes ....also had “grizzlies” (metal RR type grates) there they beat the big rock down through into smaller rock so they could haul/rail car it out...which they still mine the same way today. When you see a mess like you saw that’s usually a caused by a “rock blast” which happens in even modern mines today...the pressure builds up and literally will explode like dynamite went off...”rock blast”. My older brother worked all jobs in the silver mines in North Idaho, the Silver Valley ... I left another comment in this video and also one on your previous video. Good stuff! Brings back memories for me! I actually took a Mining Class in high school 41 years ago (only in Idaho) and have been down in the Lucky Friday, Galena, Sunshine, and Bunker Hill mines. Back in the day this was when men became men through hard work and they were and are still paid very well if your a “miner” ...as not all men/women who work underground are technically “miners”.... When the mines closed a lot of people moved away...the entire city of Wallace, Idaho is now on their historic register. Man...now I’m homesick.

  • @olivei2484
    @olivei2484 6 лет назад +1

    Very nice find. Glad you is safe.

  • @rosemarykasper4001
    @rosemarykasper4001 6 лет назад

    That was maybe the coolest mine explore I have ever seen! Thanks for sharing and stay safe. 😮

  • @briangilson2818
    @briangilson2818 5 лет назад +1

    You sure are a very brave man going into that bad area ,many thanks for sharing your adventures underground with us ,best wish's.

  • @FL70NJ
    @FL70NJ 6 лет назад +1

    The blue is simply amazing!! Damn, around 26:45 and up it sure does get ugly!! Then at 29:10 you have one hellova ladder!! The best of luck to you and happy trails!!

  • @markattardo
    @markattardo 5 лет назад +3

    I recently found your channel. Amazing stuff you come across in the dark places of the world. I'd be lost in wonder and photographing for days in some areas you pass.
    Not sure how you fit your giant brass set through the busted timber section, hope that's not a common thing.

  • @tinahhhsorondo8398
    @tinahhhsorondo8398 5 лет назад +1

    Awesome videos 👍🏽love seeing them crystal hope ya dug sum for yourself!

  • @hangfire7588
    @hangfire7588 6 лет назад +1

    The intensity of the color is incredible. As others have mentioned Azurite and Malachite have their strong blue and green color due to their copper in their atomic structure. Have you ever picked up or broken off a sample of the blue mineral to see the depth of the color? It reminds me of blue azo dye in powder form that I saw splashed over the walls and floor of an elementary school that had been abandoned and visited by vandals. The intensity of the color was the same but of course, only on the very surface. And I wasn't one of the first vandals. It's becoming difficult to chose which of your videos is a favorite. Thanks for sharing.

    • @TVRExploring
      @TVRExploring  6 лет назад +2

      Thank you. I've seen some impressive blues underground, but this one was definitely the best...

  • @nadeemahmed640
    @nadeemahmed640 4 года назад

    Good job man.appreciate your efforts.Really enjoy

  • @paigelee6321
    @paigelee6321 5 лет назад

    Beautiful blues awesome interesting thank you 😊

    • @TVRExploring
      @TVRExploring  5 лет назад

      Yes, the colors in this one were awesome.

  • @kingwalkthrough8885
    @kingwalkthrough8885 6 лет назад +2

    Best yet. Big cahunes to pass that busted timber. 👍👍👍👍

  • @PlanetMojo
    @PlanetMojo 6 лет назад

    This one looks like a movie set with perfect timbers and all of the color. Very cool looking mine.

    • @TVRExploring
      @TVRExploring  6 лет назад

      Haha, yeah, this one looked almost too perfect to me in the beginning. Just like a movie set, as you said... Thanks for the comment.

  • @cutt1293
    @cutt1293 6 лет назад +1

    @TVR Exploring, I was curious about the paper from the film and found this.-- "Introduced around 1940 in sheets rated at ASA daylight 200 and tungsten 160, it was one of Kodak's first high-speed (for the time) black-and-white films. Tri-X was released in 35mm and 120 in 1954." Love your videos!

    • @TVRExploring
      @TVRExploring  6 лет назад

      Thanks for looking up the details... That's interesting.

  • @sharonlegnon427
    @sharonlegnon427 6 лет назад

    Mother Earth is awesome in her colors. That blue is sooo beautiful. WOW there is a lot of pressure going on in there!!!! LOL on the want ads - luckily it changed because I was an engineer/senior draftsperon. I can tell you that there were 'men' who disapproved until I proved myself. Worked for Ingersoll Rand. Nice find.

    • @TVRExploring
      @TVRExploring  6 лет назад

      I was certainly impressed by those blues myself! Yes, I couldn't believe the pressure those support timbers were under. I probably don't want to know how little was still keeping things together. Ha, that's funny about the want ads given your perspective. I'd love to know the date on that newspaper. Northrop purchased Grumman in 1994, but it obviously dates to well before then... I applaud you for your choice of career. Even today, there are disappointingly few women that go into the hard sciences and they have it a lot easier than pioneers such as yourself.

  • @jasonasselin
    @jasonasselin 6 лет назад +7

    Kodak Tri-X: The Best Black-and-White Film Ever Made? - It came out first in 1940, when Europe was plunged into war but America was enjoying the dying days of calm before the storm. It was Kodak’s new black-and-white film, designed to be shot on location. The only problem was, it was only available in large format.
    Fourteen years later, it came out in 35mm and 120 and quickly became a staple of news photographers and photojournalists; a monochrome film that could be pushed and pushed and pushed again, creating atmospheric pictures on overcast days and in gloomy interiors.

  • @cowboygeologist7772
    @cowboygeologist7772 5 лет назад +1

    Beautiful minerals. Some day, I am going to count how many times you say "Uh" in your videos. LoL

    • @TVRExploring
      @TVRExploring  5 лет назад +1

      Well, these aren't scripted unlike most documentaries or reality shows. So, it is no simple thing in processing things being seen for the first time, keeping track of where one is in a complex underground environment, looking out for potentially fatal hidden dangers, monitoring the gas meters, keeping the camera and lights focused and attempting to narrate in a smooth, interesting manner all at the same time without saying "uh" as a filler.

  • @Seat1AJoe
    @Seat1AJoe 4 года назад

    Thanks for the great show!

  • @Big_John_C
    @Big_John_C 6 лет назад

    You know you wanted to see what was at the top of that manway...... lol. Thanks for your dedication and hard work, take care.

    • @TVRExploring
      @TVRExploring  6 лет назад

      Haha, you know me well! Fortunately, I did find access from the outside to the upper level. To my surprise, it was small and quite dull. The only feature was the top of the manway. If there is interest, I can post it in the future, but it doesn't make for compelling viewing. Thank you for the comment.

  • @chtisponytail538
    @chtisponytail538 6 лет назад

    Well i know your not completely crazy when you said.... looks like a cave in there, thats alittle UNNERVING, LOL ! Keep up the great vids & this one is my fav so far !!

    • @chtisponytail538
      @chtisponytail538 6 лет назад

      That was cave-in, not cave in, plus timber under pressure was most impressive !! 👍 👍

    • @TVRExploring
      @TVRExploring  6 лет назад +1

      Haha, yes, even I have my limits...

  • @AbandonedMines11
    @AbandonedMines11 6 лет назад +8

    Nice shot at 21:36 or thereabouts showing all that classic timbering! This looked like a pretty extensive mine. I couldn't believe the snapped timbers that you showed towards the end. I saw something similar to that when a couple of us hiked out to the Carrizo Gorge railroad trestle. We went into a dis-used tunnel along the way that suffered earthquake damage in the early 20th century and saw timbers in the tunnel that looked exactly like what you showed except on a much bigger scale. So I would guess the snapped timbers you showed suffered a similar fate. I chuckled when I saw your reply to a comment below where you mentioned about the "haters who weren't home from their miserable 9 to 5 jobs yet" (or something like that). LOL Yes, there are a LOT of jealous bitches out there, unfortunately. Great video here, though! Looks like you were by yourself, too. Hopefully you got to camp out somewhere nearby.

    • @TVRExploring
      @TVRExploring  6 лет назад +6

      Yes, those timbers looked different from what I am used to seeing with failing or failed timbers. Usually, the damage comes from the top rather than the sides... So, I think your earthquake theory makes sense. Indeed, there are a lot of jealous bitches out there. They rarely get under my skin though because people spew hatred and troll people online only if they don’t have a real, happy life offline. As you and I have discussed before, these are sad people with zero control; losers in every aspect of life. Yes, fortunately, I was able to camp within feet of the portal on the waste rock and it was a great spot - awesome views, sheltered from the wind, etc.

  • @ExpeditionTech
    @ExpeditionTech 6 лет назад

    Wonderful colors. Great job on your videography.

  • @jonesfactor9
    @jonesfactor9 5 лет назад +1

    Timber section near the end was very cool

  • @linall2345
    @linall2345 6 лет назад +1

    Probably one of the most beautiful mines I have seen on your channel yet and one of the scariest!! Would faults moving cause that much pressure? I was yelling at your to NOT go through but I figured you would. Lol

    • @TVRExploring
      @TVRExploring  6 лет назад +1

      LOL, yeah, I'm always curious what is around the next bend... So, yes, as you noticed, those shattered timbers did not look like the normal failed timbers. They were being crushed from the sides rather than the top (which is what usually happens). To my mind, there isn't a lot that explains that other than seismic activity.

  • @Merkenau
    @Merkenau 6 лет назад +2

    I'm speechless.........
    I can imagine me laying on the floor, spending hours of staring at the coloured ceiling

  • @johncarold
    @johncarold 5 лет назад

    The blues reminds me of a different mine you were at and it also was in Nevada. Beautiful rocks and it sure is cool to see what you find there.

  • @markcantemail8018
    @markcantemail8018 6 лет назад

    That is some Yummy Color ! Thank you for the video of the mine with the most mosts . 536

    • @TVRExploring
      @TVRExploring  6 лет назад

      Ha, yes, this is the mine with the mostest.

  • @theslimeylimey
    @theslimeylimey 5 лет назад

    You're a brave man going through that failing timber alone. You can feel the tremendous forces being held back. Just watching was uncomfortable.

    • @TVRExploring
      @TVRExploring  5 лет назад

      Yes, I could almost feel the tension when I was carefully easing my way through that section.

  • @ymagrandpa1887
    @ymagrandpa1887 5 лет назад

    I think that beautiful blue rock you found is called "Owyhee blue opal". It has come to the forefront of mineral "gems" fairly recently. It is now a very desired mineral & the value & price has been increasing dramatically. This mineral follows the Owyhee river starting in Nevada but the best deposits so far are primarily in Oregon.(None has been found so far in Nevada).

  • @w000mbat
    @w000mbat 6 лет назад

    hi, one of the best mines, in terms of excitement level. You sir are a nut job. the way you jumped into those fractured timbers, it was just great. after a moment one can realize it's not as dangerous as it seems, just have to move like a pro circus acrobat :)

  • @tomkenney5365
    @tomkenney5365 5 лет назад

    My dad bought a small Texaco bulk oil plant in 1965 and opened a Texaco service station in '69. I would put that Texaco can as late '60s to early '70s. And boy, do I wish I had all the Texaco toys he brought home for me.

    • @TVRExploring
      @TVRExploring  5 лет назад

      That old Texaco gear would be great!

  • @annadaugherty9622
    @annadaugherty9622 6 лет назад

    The yellowish-brown mineral is copper and the blue is oxidation. Seems to be an interesting old copper mine. The notched beams are cross ties. My dad was a railroad section foreman for the old L&N Railway for many years. I saw my share of those ties when I was a kid.

  • @Cjchass77chassagne
    @Cjchass77chassagne 6 лет назад

    Awesome video like always!!love you guys 👍

  • @JustAnotherPaddy
    @JustAnotherPaddy 5 лет назад +2

    For an abandoned mine, it sure has a whole lot of contemporary flo orange and pink spray paint every 10 feet. Someone has plans.

    • @TVRExploring
      @TVRExploring  5 лет назад +1

      Those are surveyor marks or where samples were taken. A lot of abandoned mines get a fresh look whenever commodity prices tick up...

  • @Stevendebyi
    @Stevendebyi 5 лет назад +1

    I'm not sure if you have massive ball's or your just insane but either way very entertaining.had me holding my breath

  • @handbyl
    @handbyl 5 лет назад

    You ... are .... nuts! :-) Great video - this must have been an old mine rejuvenated in the 20th C. That would explain the mix of old and newer timbers.

    • @TVRExploring
      @TVRExploring  5 лет назад +1

      Yes, many abandoned mines go through cycles of being worked and then abandoned and then worked again depending on technology and commodities prices.

  • @andrewpowell6457
    @andrewpowell6457 6 лет назад +1

    Wow those timbers were on the verge of completely failing Glad you got out OK

    • @TVRExploring
      @TVRExploring  6 лет назад +1

      Yes, those timbers were hanging on by a thread! Thank you...

  • @Tom-cy5em
    @Tom-cy5em 6 лет назад

    Good video those timber squares look pretty new alongside the old tree supports in their along with the pink fluorescent paint on the walls probably worked off and on through the years. It would be nice to know what year the mine was started. Thanks for taking us along.

    • @TVRExploring
      @TVRExploring  6 лет назад

      I don't know the year it was started, but it has definitely been worked off and on over a long period of time.

  • @patdenney7046
    @patdenney7046 6 лет назад +1

    Good job I used to bring pickup truck loads of that green and blue Rock home people sure love to put it in their Rock Gardens or in their collections
    Aerosmith wrote that song for you!

    • @TVRExploring
      @TVRExploring  6 лет назад +1

      It's a beautiful rock. I'm not surprised people like to have it around them...

  • @yadong8037
    @yadong8037 6 лет назад +1

    20:04 "That's a pretty big pipe right in front of me..." That feeling i allways get, when i go pee ;) Very nice video, like allways. You're a pro! Cheers!

  • @Lalunabreeze
    @Lalunabreeze 5 лет назад

    👍🏼🧨❤️nice. Great video. Ty. Lonnng tunnel. Wow. Cool crystals. Go back, safely first 🗝🗝🗝

    • @TVRExploring
      @TVRExploring  5 лет назад

      But then I won't know what's around the next bend!

  • @larryspringston1292
    @larryspringston1292 5 лет назад

    Great video! I like all your posts and you sure don’t shy away from potential disaster to get the best shots. How do you deal with going in far enough to get into bad air or Co2 gases? Seems you would need a backup for that scenario.

    • @TVRExploring
      @TVRExploring  5 лет назад

      Thank you. I carry a gas meter to cover the risk of bad air...

  • @donaldpowers3314
    @donaldpowers3314 5 лет назад

    Your opening picture still looks like an old(ancient) map..... its the best picture of naturally occurring mixing bowl things under ground...

    • @TVRExploring
      @TVRExploring  5 лет назад

      Some pretty amazing geology in this one...

  • @ThriftStoreHacker
    @ThriftStoreHacker 5 лет назад +2

    Cool video. The blue stuff may be copper sulfate. Looks like a mine that could make someone a good amount of money copper mining.

    • @montananative2414
      @montananative2414 5 лет назад

      I agree with nhra gold..... the blue is azurite or possibly bornite (copper ore).

  • @jamesfohare
    @jamesfohare 6 лет назад

    Thanks for the video and taking the risk to get it.I have worked in some pretty holes underground but I still find those old mines interesting, especially when someone like yourself is taking the time to film them. I could be wrong but where the newer timber had broken and the rock behind the planking small and lose. It looked cut like and fill, so they did'nt have cart the wast all the way outside. Like someone has already mentioned there may have been a earthquake and it has shifted. So thank you again great video enjoyed it .

    • @TVRExploring
      @TVRExploring  6 лет назад +1

      Thank you. Yes, it did seem as if the miners might have stashed waste rock behind the timbers.

  • @539Productions
    @539Productions 6 лет назад +1

    That blue was really amazing! Make me really want to know if it was indeed copper!

  • @matthewjeschke
    @matthewjeschke 5 лет назад +1

    God I love your vids. If ever in southern arizona let me know. Fyi, your in camera stabilization sometimes fights your gimbal. I just turned off in camera stabilization for my setup ;)

    • @TVRExploring
      @TVRExploring  5 лет назад +1

      Thank you very much. I'm working through the backlog of videos right now, but I'll have to give turning off the stabilization in the camera a try... As you said, they do come into conflict at times.

  • @ancientgoldfinder49er13
    @ancientgoldfinder49er13 4 года назад

    The blue rocks and other colors of rocks in this video looks to me like Azurite, Malachite and copper rock . The decomposed quartz rock that I have seen in this video is known to have gold in it, I have crushed that type of quartz rock and I have gotten fine gold out of it. Thank you for sharing this video, you have capture some amazing stuff and it is one my favorite videos that I have watched from you. Looking forward to seeing more and stay safe.

  • @rickbeckham4401
    @rickbeckham4401 5 лет назад +1

    Of all the marking on the wall of the tunnel, there seem to be orange spray paint. At what time was that in use?

    • @TVRExploring
      @TVRExploring  5 лет назад

      It's modern. From surveys or geologists in there taking samples...

  • @anniegaddis5240
    @anniegaddis5240 5 лет назад

    That was fun! Thanks!

  • @christianbuczko1481
    @christianbuczko1481 6 лет назад +3

    There's alot of sulphides around, and that may be reacting with copper to make copper sulphate, that's a blue crystal very similar to those blues in the mine. Also, Was that a rat i saw in the distance at 16mins25ish btw. Something seemed to dart from right to left down the tunnel.

    • @TVRExploring
      @TVRExploring  6 лет назад +2

      It looks a lot like copper sulfate and it probably is. They mined copper here (among other things) and so there is no question about the presence of copper. I tend to shy away from making declarative statements in the videos so that I don't look foolish in hindsight if I get something wrong. Yes, that was a bat crossing from one passage to another...

    • @olivei2484
      @olivei2484 6 лет назад +1

      Agreed. looks a lot like copper sulphate. The yellows mixed in with the blues look like Iron sulphate. Kinda a flat yellow color.

  • @karenpolehn6852
    @karenpolehn6852 6 лет назад

    Glad you made it back out of that one.

  • @BirdShotIV
    @BirdShotIV 6 лет назад

    Just discovered this channel, fun stuff!

  • @jacobmosher5924
    @jacobmosher5924 5 лет назад

    Great video man!!

  • @klubstompers
    @klubstompers 5 лет назад +5

    7:24 looks like gold in the center of the azurite inside some quartz.

    • @dudmic
      @dudmic 4 года назад

      it's pyrite

    • @klubstompers
      @klubstompers 4 года назад

      @@dudmic Ive never seen pyrite that looks so smooth and round, all i have seen is very flaky looking with sharp edges and boxy corners, some what like stacked pressed layers of fish scales. This looks too rounded, but you could be right.

    • @dudmic
      @dudmic 4 года назад

      @@klubstompers we would only know if TVR goes back there and takes it :D , although might be something else altogether

  • @Toddis
    @Toddis 5 лет назад

    You should bring a blacklight into the mine and see if anything glows, that blue stuff looks pretty wild!

    • @TVRExploring
      @TVRExploring  5 лет назад +1

      We have actually gone through several blacklights. We keep breaking them because exploring abandoned mines is really hard on gear.

  • @RICDirector
    @RICDirector 5 лет назад

    How awesome is that!! :) Looks like further copper exploration might be worthwhile, but in the meantime--wow! Those gypsum clusters actually made me say "Golly! That's Pretty!" (and I'd normally rather swear but they're so delicate and light...just didn't fit.) for the first time in ages.
    Have you ever considered hitting some of these adits with a black light, just for fun? I'd love to see that..... :) Please? Love your videos!
    Note: They may have repurposed old juniper timbers from outside; as you noted, they're pretty weathered, not like they'd been scaled of bark for use in the mine, or had the bark fall off in the mine.
    What is your plan if you ever do get stuck behind a rockfall?

    • @TVRExploring
      @TVRExploring  5 лет назад +1

      Yes, there are definitely some interesting minerals present. We keep breaking our black lights. Mine exploring is hard on gear!
      Not much of a plan for getting stuck behind a caved section because it is hard to predict all of the variables... If possible, I'd push enough dirt aside to get out. If there was a raise present, then I would try taking that up to see where it went. If neither of those were possible, I'd probably just hope that the falling rocks killed me quickly because that would be better than slowly suffocating.

  • @destravlr
    @destravlr 6 лет назад

    Chalcanthite (kal-can-thite) is copper sulphate, as someone below stated. Not uncommon in mines with copper mineralogy. Sometimes it forms in relatively stable crystals or forms. Most often it dries up to a blue powder. Nice to see this occurrence. Would like to have seen the sign on the large "explosives box" for contents and age. Surprised that you risked your life to go into the area with broken timbers. Good place to have become trapped.

  • @acammer
    @acammer 5 лет назад +1

    You are crazy. Thanks for sharing, and be careful.

  • @Danzoid61
    @Danzoid61 5 лет назад

    28:59 A mount for a windlass on the right side of the timber set. Ground covered in debris so cannot see a winze. Perhaps there was sheave at the top of the tool shoot and the windlass was used to crank the tools up by the rope seen lying along the tool shoot at 29:08 ?

    • @TVRExploring
      @TVRExploring  5 лет назад +2

      You have good eyes... I missed that mount for the windlass when I was there, but no question you're right about what that is. Given the proximity to the tool chute/ore chute, I believe your explanation about them cranking the tools up with it seems the most likely.

  • @priscillaross-fox9407
    @priscillaross-fox9407 5 лет назад

    I was impressed at first by the amount of 'ancient Indian beer cans' but when I saw the matches, cigarette pkg. and spray paint from the same I knew you hit the jackpot! LOL
    I think I had seen some greenish and/or olive colored epidote near the beginning, often associated with silver.
    BTW, I would have turned around when I saw those bulging timbers. Did you check to see if there had been earthquakes in that area?

    • @TVRExploring
      @TVRExploring  5 лет назад +1

      Yes, it is an archaeologist's dream! Ha, no, I didn't check if there had been earthquakes. I'm just glad there weren't any when I was there.

  • @donaldsmith3048
    @donaldsmith3048 5 лет назад

    I can only say that I would have NEVER gone past the broken temblors. You have brass balls! You are the kind of person that would set on top of tons of explosives to be shot into space!

    • @TVRExploring
      @TVRExploring  5 лет назад

      You're certainly right about my keen interest in space exploration.

  • @bigh7777
    @bigh7777 6 лет назад

    This mine was started early 1900s. Stopped for a bit in the 50's 60s and was worked again in the 70's early 80's...then abandoned.