GALLERY
Ingersoll Rand compressor housed in the Dan Creek compressor shack. Operated by a water-driven pelton wheel, it provided compressed air to drill and blast bedrock drains to facilitate the old time gold mining operation.
Copper nugget weighing about two pounds with Dryas leaf. Found at Dan Creek.
Looking across the Nizina River from Williams Peak. Mile-High-Cliffs on the right and Sourdough Mountain center.
Compressor shack antiques porcelain dinner ware, velvet tobacco cans and blasting caps can cover.
Old round point shovel used at Dan Creek, note the inset photo with the shovel trademark.
Tracks made in about 6 inches of snow and then windblown.
Boulder mountain on the left, Nicholai Butte just left of center and the shoulder of Williams Peak on the right. View from bridge across Dan Creek looking up the creek.
Early 1900's view looking down Dan Creek, across the Nizina River, Sourdough Mountain in the background. Photo courtesy University of Alaska Fairbanks Regina Knill Cope collection.
Antique kerosene can found along the old pack trail going to Dan Creek. Note the pour spout on the top right of the can.
Compressor shack, on upper black shale bench. Note the large boulders. The old timers left them and mined around them.
Hydraulic monitor, used high pressure stream of water to move gold bearing gravel through the sluice box.
Large pipe bringing a head of water from the dam at the Hole-In-The-Wall to the hydraulic monitor. Large valve used to divert the flow when not needed.
Looking down the Kennicott Glacier toward the town of McCarthy, Alaska.
Early dam at the Hole-In-The-Wall to generate water pressure for hydraulic mining. Photo courtesy of the University of Alaska Fairbanks, Regina Knill Cope collection.
Located on an upper black shale bedrock bench, the compressor shack served to house a large air compressor, providing air to drill and blast bedrock drains to facilitate the old time gold mining operation.