Thank you so much for filming this working and for pausing on the info panels. I'm an archaeologist looking at a historic stamp mill site in Canada and this is a really great reference for me!
Thanks much for stopping in front of the plaques. I was able to pause and read them all. I've been around the local granite quarry and am very familiar with jaw and cone crushers and sand pumps and screens. Lots of good stuff yall have there. Thanks again and GBWYall!
This was fantastic and I learned much from your excellent production. I'll be more informed as I continue to adventure around Death Valley National Park and the extensive mines works there.
Visited this museum back in 1994. Absolutely awesome! However, unfortunately, I was not there when the mill was running. Thanks for putting this up on RUclips!
Future prospectors when this mill is abandoned 50 to 100 yrs from now ??? Those history buffs and prospectors will pan every nook and cranny in that mill !! Leave them a grain or two! Great video . 👍✌️
Hi there- I'm writing a historical fiction novel set in Montana during the 1920s. In my story there's been a murder in a stamp mill, and I'm having a hard time finding the info I need online. So I figure I'd go to the experts. I sure hope you can help me out. Here are a few of my gruesome questions:The particular stamp mill in my book is the Strawberry mill near Pony. I'm trying to label what the gangway is by the wheels that turn the stamps. Right now the victim is crushed by a stamp, but I can't figure out why the amalgamation table wouldn't have dragged him away. And the gap is very small according to my research (7")- which is a writer's dilemma. Would it be more plausible for him to have fallen into the ore-bin? How? I have the schematic of the Blake rock-breaker from the diagram below. Or maybe I'm way off-base here. Any other suggestions for how a man might get murdered by stamp-mill equipment? Thank you so much for taking the time to consider the questions. I really appreciate your help. Shari My email is sdecterhirst@gmail.com
Thank you so much for filming this working and for pausing on the info panels. I'm an archaeologist looking at a historic stamp mill site in Canada and this is a really great reference for me!
Thanks much for stopping in front of the plaques. I was able to pause and read them all. I've been around the local granite quarry and am very familiar with jaw and cone crushers and sand pumps and screens. Lots of good stuff yall have there. Thanks again and GBWYall!
This was fantastic and I learned much from your excellent production. I'll be more informed as I continue to adventure around Death Valley National Park and the extensive mines works there.
Thank you. Check out this guys channel he knows everything about mines and gold ruclips.net/channel/UCEeEMoldn_MytOY17kYhX_g
Visited this museum back in 1994. Absolutely awesome! However, unfortunately, I was not there when the mill was running. Thanks for putting this up on RUclips!
It has changed a lot since then. They have several operating exhibits now.
Traveling Tom , that’s great to hear! I’ll have to try and get that way again sometime. Thanks.
Sounds from the past born again!!
Very cool! The old-timers probably traded hearing for gold
Future prospectors when this mill is abandoned 50 to 100 yrs from now ???
Those history buffs and prospectors will pan every nook and cranny in that mill !!
Leave them a grain or two!
Great video .
👍✌️
2:47 Did you press a button to get this started?
Yes.
Would you believe in my country , miners pay for me to build these at their mines.
I've had alot of fun building them .
Hi there- I'm writing a historical fiction novel set in Montana during the 1920s. In my story there's been a murder in a stamp mill, and I'm having a hard time finding the info I need online. So I figure I'd go to the experts. I sure hope you can help me out.
Here are a few of my gruesome questions:The particular stamp mill in my book is the Strawberry mill near Pony. I'm trying to label what the gangway is by the wheels that turn the stamps.
Right now the victim is crushed by a stamp, but I can't figure out why the amalgamation table wouldn't have dragged him away. And the gap is very small according to my research (7")- which is a writer's dilemma.
Would it be more plausible for him to have fallen into the ore-bin? How? I have the schematic of the Blake rock-breaker from the diagram below.
Or maybe I'm way off-base here. Any other suggestions for how a man might get murdered by stamp-mill equipment?
Thank you so much for taking the time to consider the questions. I really appreciate your help. Shari
My email is sdecterhirst@gmail.com
I sent you a E-mail.