carbuff
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Oct 30, 2009
- Messages
- 29,783
- Reaction score
- 73,925
Thanks Al Ka for your posts and refreshing everything.
I don't have any image in my head of how a mineshaft would look like, but it seems pretty deep for a family to go in....really amazing that she was found in this desolated place, that deep and covered with trash.....almost to coincidental imo.
It's pretty common for families in the western US to go into mine shafts--prospecting, looking for minerals (particularly crystals) or just exploring for fun. Some people really enjoy poking around in the dark. My family was never one to go into the shafts but we liked to visit mines and abandoned homesteads just to look around and feel the history.
I found a blog post from a guy who visited another mine in the Nipton area. This isn't the one our Jane Doe was found in, but it gives an idea of what the land in that area is like: http://kensphotogallery.blogspot.com/2015/05/lucy-gray-mine.html
This is a different mine in the area, with some pictures of what the shaft and levels look like.
Note that there are dozens if not hundreds of shafts riddling the desert, some of them dating back to the Spanish silver mining, others as recent as a couple of years with the new uranium rush. Some of them have been closed off with safety bars, as the two in the photos have, but others are barely visible. You have to be careful hiking in an area like that because a hole be in front of you hidden by sagebrush or rock and you don't see it until you're about to step in it.