What is Bryson Burke up to right now and what are the latest results?

Salting a Mine
By Earl Cox (Deadwood Magazine)

Most westerners and readers of western history or fiction have heard the expression ‘salting a mine’ and perhaps wondered about the origin of the term. The phrase most likely originated in colonial America.

Bryson Burke Diamond Corporation
© 2001 - 2003

Clicking on the large diamond always brings you home.
Hall of Fame - About Diamonds - Current Info - Site History - Links - Contact

BRYSON BURKE
Home
Mission
Board
History
Business Plan
Latest Information
Building Our Drill
Innovation
Photo Album
Satellite Weather
Free News - Sign Guestbook

INVESTING
Investment
Stock Quotes

COMMUNICATION
Press Releases
Newsletter
Current Information
Contact

SITE GEOLOGY
Geology Reports
Site Geologic History
Magnetic Maps Index
Heavy Minerals Index
Grenville Province Index

DIAMOND POLITICS
Blood Diamonds
Kimberley Process

DIAMOND GEOLOGY
Indicator Minerals
Kimberlites
Decay of Kimberlites
Kimberlites & Magnetics
Placer Deposits
Magnetic Reversal
Crustal Thickness
How Diamonds are Made
Glaciation Issues
Mineral Transport Index
Doing the Map Work
Gathering Samples
World Mining Index
Excavation and Recovery
Mining Corporations
Mining News Magazines
Environmental Issues
Diamonds in Space
World's Only MineCam
Live Volcano Geo-Cams

EXPLORATION
Site Exploration History
Topography Map Index
Location Map
Claim Maps Index

DIAMONDS
Diamonds and Graphite
Diamond Formation
Grading Diamonds
Price of Diamonds
Industrial Diamonds
Drilling Equipment
Medical Use of Diamonds
Gemstones
Birthstones
Hall of Fame

DIAMONDS IN CULTURE
Good Books on Diamonds
Cremains to Diamonds
Diamonds in Lawsuits
Irish Diamonds
Unusual Diamond News
Diamonds in the Media
Famous Jewelers
In Advertisements
Top Twenty Cut Diamonds
Top Diamonds
Diamond Lore
Theft/Hoaxes/and Fraud
Religion Index
Diamond/ Culture Index
Television
Movies
Games - Play Now
Music
Weddings
Royals
Our Darlings
Diamond Animal Index

INTERACTIVE
Reflection/Refraction Index
Crossword Puzzle Index
Which Is A Diamond I
Which is a Diamond II
Become a Gemologist

 

 

 

 

 

Theft Index . . . . Salting Index
Where "Salting" came from . . .

 

 

In colonial settlements along the Atlantic seaboard salt, an important commodity, was obtained by boiling sea water in large iron kettles to produce a salty residue. As the country’s population spread westward, salt was obtained from salt water wells or springs. Any source of salt water was a valuable property and owners made good incomes producing and selling salt.

Innovative entrepreneurs got into the act by dumping salt into fresh water wells, making the property attractive to someone wanting to get into the salt business. The term ‘salting a well’ soon worked its way into the language.

As the modus operandi moved into western mining areas, the practice evolved into salting a mine. Ingenious methods were devised to salt barren or uneconomical gold mines. Gold dust sprinkled in a mine or in ore sample sacks could easily fool the novice. In one famous case in northwest Wyoming, mining claims were salted with small uncut diamonds. The scam fell through when a prospective buyer found a few cut diamonds inadvertently mixed in.

Uranium boom years of the 1950s and 60s were prime opportunities for scam artists. Prospectors with little mineral knowledge used a Geiger counter to detect radiation from uranium or other minerals such as thorium, which was used in gas mantles on Aladdin lamps. Scam artists wrapped gas mantles around a stick of dynamite and exploded it in an underground uranium mine, resulting in a high radiation reading on a Geiger counter. The unsuspecting prospector depending solely on the Geiger counter reading became a prime candidate for the purchase of a salted uranium mine.

Another version of ‘salting’ happened in the Black Hills the summer of 1927 when President Calvin Coolidge, an avid fisherman, vacationed in Custer State Park. Fishing streams in the park were ‘salted’ with hungry trout prior to the presidential visit.