INTRODUCTION & HISTORY
The Nixon Fork Mine is an existing underground lode
gold mine located 32 miles northeast of McGrath, Alaska. The
area surrounding the present day Nixon Fork Mine was
first staked in 1917 and limited underground mining
occurred sporadically between 1917 and the early 1950’s. The
Nixon Fork Mine as it exists today was permitted and
developed by Nevada Goldfields, Inc. in 1995 and operated
until 1999.
Nevada Goldfields constructed a 4,200-foot Hercules
airstrip, expanded the road system, and constructed
a new mill, shop, 50-person camp, tailings impoundment,
and water supply system. The mining rate was
approximately 150 tons per day and a froth-flotation
milling process was used to produce a gold and copper
concentrate that was shipped off-site for final processing. Mining
and milling operations ceased when Nevada Goldfields
parent corporation and its subsidiaries were voluntarily
placed into bankruptcy. The trustee of the U.S.
Bankruptcy Court relinquished rights to the mining
leases and legally abandoned ownership of the facilities
and equipment at the site. The facilities and
equipment were transferred to the federal mining claimant
Mespelt & Almasy Mining Company. Mystery
Creek Resources, Inc. leased the property, facilities
and equipment from Almasy in 2003 and submitted a Plan
of Operations to the U.S. Bureau of Land Management
that envisioned a phased return to full production
at the mine. Mystery Creek Resources was authorized
by the U.S. Bureau of Land Management to re-commission
the surface and underground facilities and to conduct
mineral exploration activities and general site clean-up.
CURRENT PROJECT
The project currently consists of two developed small
ore bodies with currently defined resources of approximately
126,400 tonnes, containing 131,500 ounces of gold. An
additional 116,000 tonnes of existing mill tailings
are reported to contain 30,200 ounces of gold.
Mystery Creek Resources has submitted a Plan of Operations
and Reclamation Plan to the U.S. Bureau of Land Management
and an application for a Solid Waste Management Permit
to the Alaska Department of Environmental Conservation
and proposes to reinstitute mining and gold production
from the facility beginning in the winter of 2005-2006. New
ore would be mined by underground methods and processed
in a modified mill utilizing a gravity-flotation-cyanide
leach recovery process capable of handling 150 tonnes
per day of ore. In addition, 350 tonnes per day
of existing tailings (from prior operations) would be
reprocessed by treatment in the cyanide leach portion
of the mill during the spring to fall season. Prior
to the completion of the reprocessing of the existing
tailings, all new tailings would be treated in a “cyanide-destruction” circuit
and deposited in a newly constructed filtered tailings
disposal site (dry stack). After the completion
of the reprocessing of the existing tailings, future
tailings from new ore will be deposited back into the
existing tailings facility after the inspection and any
needed repairs to the existing liner system.
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