Impressions of Spain

Part 19

Chapter 193,381 wordsPublic domain

The Kingston Gold Mines have acquired four important concessions in the municipality of Puente de Domingo, Florez, in the province of Léon. These properties are well situated on the banks of the river Sil and its tributaries, and are very accessible, being close to the railway station of Ponferada. The alluvial deposits cover almost the whole of the area of the concession. The average of the assays made of the alluvial deposits give five dwts. of gold per cubic yard; but the engineers state that, taking the average at only one and a-half dwts. per cubic yard, these properties ought to give a large return per annum.

THE MORALEJA GOLD-BEARING ALLUVIAL CONCESSION.

This is another company that has been formed for the purpose of working alluvial gold mines in Spain, and there are good indications that their enterprise will be crowned with success. The two properties known as Barbantes and Acha, comprising 208 acres in the province of Orense, have already been tested, with the most satisfactory results. The engineers have based their calculations on the uniform depths of the deposits of fifteen feet, but in most places they are far deeper, and it is reported that nearly the whole of the ground will pay well to work. The tests have given an average return of five dwts. of gold per cubic yard; but the facilities for working and handling the ore are so favourable that if only a quarter of that estimate is realised, the profits of the company will be enormous.

THE LUGO GOLDFIELDS.

The Lugo Goldfields, Limited, has acquired three groups of properties in the province of Lugo (Galicia). These concessions, which are situated on the main road to Madrid, and twenty-six miles from Lugo, consist of 525 acres of quartz country and alluvial property seventy-five acres in extent, which contain strong evidences that the Romans, during their occupation of the Peninsula, washed from it large quantities of alluvial gold. On the first group, broad gold-bearing quartz reefs, which increase in width from six feet to twenty-four feet as depth is reached, have been traced for many miles on each side of the property; and on the second group the reefs are highly mineralised, and contain gold, silver, copper, and lead. The reefs are situated in hills rising from 350 feet to 450 feet above the river-bed, which will enable the ore to be run out of the galleries by means of trucks on rails, and so save, for some considerable time at least, the initial outlay and annual expenditure entailed by the erection and maintenance of pumping and haulage machinery. In taking the samples of stone for assay, good, bad, and indifferent stone was included, and the calculations as to the value of the ore was based on a minimum extraction of five dwts. of gold per ton. The assays gave returns varying from three dwts. two grs. up to sixteen dwts. eight grs., and the ore has been tested to be eminently adapted for concentration. Water, labour, and timber present no difficulties, and the working of the mines should be carried on at a low cost. It is estimated that the expense of mining the ore, delivering the concentrates in Swansea, and paying the charges for treatment there, will amount to 10s. per ton of ore crude, which means that two and a-half dwts. of pure ore will pay all expenses.

SILVER-LEAD.

THE SANTA MARIA MINING COMPANY, LIMITED, SILVER-LEAD MINES (BADAJOZ, SPAIN).

Among the most important of the silver-lead properties in Spain, mention has been made to the group in the province of Badajoz that has been floated in London under the title of the Santa Maria Mining Company, Limited. This property, which originally consisted of four leases, having an area of 138 acres, has been since increased to 166 acres, by the acquisition of the Santa Florentina lease at Mestanza, Puertollano, in the neighbouring province of Ciudad-Real. So far as the position of the Santa Maria property is concerned, it could not easily be bettered. It is only six miles distant from the railway system, with which it is connected by two good roads, and is situated quite near to the Rothschilds’ Smelting Works at Peñarroya. Timber is procurable at a cheap rate from Cuenca and Portugal; there is an abundance of water obtainable for all mining purposes; while labour, which is obtained from two villages in the vicinity, is cheap, plentiful, and efficient.

The history of the Santa Maria group presents, as do so many other mines in Spain, an object lesson in mismanagement and wilful disregard for the future of the property. It was first opened in 1845 by a Portuguese Company, and it is abundantly proved from the reports of their consulting engineer, and from the condition in which the mines was left, that the work could not have been conducted in a more haphazard and destructive fashion. No attention was given to exploration or development work; and, doubtless, acting under peremptory orders, all labour was concentrated on the extraction of the rich available ore. The shaft, instead of being perpendicular, was sunk at a vertical angle, and was so badly timbered that it was always in a dangerous condition. The galleries, being left without sufficient supports, frequently collapsed, and work was conducted at imminent risk of life to the miners. The official figures showing the quantity of ore won by the adoption of these methods are not available, but the great heaps of débris which have accumulated show that the amount was something very considerable; and it was not until 1889, when the policy of ore-grabbing could no longer be safely proceeded with until money had been spent in repairing the shaft and the workings, that the mine was abandoned and became flooded up to the first level.

During this time the Santa Maria lode was worked by its faulty shaft down to the seventh level, but the dressing of the ore was so defective that the dumps are found to contain nearly five per cent. of galena. From this refuse the present management have been obtaining from ten to twelve tons of “dressed” ore per month, giving fifty-five per cent. of lead and 600 grammes of silver per ton.

When Señor Villanova purchased the property in 1889 he took from the first level of the Santa Maria shaft about 100 tons of ore, which gave a return of seventy-five per cent. of lead and 850 grammes of silver per ton; and, then, in order to avoid the expense of unwatering the mine and repairing the shaft, he decided to confine his operations to the San Juan shaft, upon which little work had been done. The winding engine was accordingly removed and re-erected at this shaft, which was sunk to a depth of about 540 feet. Six levels were driven, in each of which the lode was found to be mineralised throughout. Señor Villanova continued to work the mine on the principle of making it entirely self-supporting. No exploration or dead-work was undertaken, and when a fault was encountered in the eastern levels the pursuit of the vein was abandoned. This fault has since been cut through in all the levels, and the lode has in every case been found to continue on the other side. The property was starved for working capital, no cross-cutting was allowed on account of the outlay it would involve, and the stoping was only carried on where the mineral was rich. Yet even under these conditions Señor Villanova extracted from this shaft alone over 3,000 tons of ore, which yielded him substantial profits.

When the present company took over the mine they were advised that both the Santa Maria and the San Juan lodes could be better and more economically worked by means of the Santa Maria shaft, and they decided to have this shaft unwatered and put into thorough repair down to the bottom level. The shaft had to be enlarged and galleries cleared, and all the workings retimbered. These operations, although vigorously prosecuted, took longer than was anticipated.

Twelve years of neglect had reduced this part of the mine to such a condition that the task of clearing the congested galleries was not only difficult but highly dangerous. The timber with which the workings were fortified was so rotten that the removal of the rubble brought down the woodwork with it. The old supports had consequently to be replaced by new timber as the work progressed; and as the galleries were constructed on a small scale, the want of space rendered it impossible to employ a large number of hands. At the same time all the buildings and the masonry work on the property, which had also fallen into decay, were repaired or rebuilt; the old engine-house at the San Juan shaft was replaced by a substantial building, tram-lines and trucks were purchased, the roads were overhauled and repaired, and the property was completely equipped and put into thorough working order. Yet in spite of all this dead work, the exploitation of Santa Maria has never been a severe charge upon the company, for the return of ore per month from the San Juan lode was sufficient to defray all the expenses incurred in development, and to return a profit on the mine. During the early part of last year the Peñarroya works were being rebuilt and enlarged, and the ore had to be sold at Carthagena; but since the reopening of the works the whole of the output has been purchased locally, and a considerable saving has been effected thereby.

COAL.

It has been already stated that the production of coal in Spain is quite insignificant in comparison with the extent of the coal-bearing beds (which are estimated to cover an area of about 3,500 square miles, of which nearly a third belongs to Oviedo); but the new find of coal (lignite) and cement stone in the province of Lerida should, and undoubtedly will, draw attention to this profitable industry. The Almatret Mines, which have an area of 820 acres, are situated on the river Elbro, near Fayon, on the main railway from Madrid to Barcelona. In each of the eight seams, which are distinctly visible on the property, the lignite is much decomposed, and the outcrops contain a great deal of gypsum. This has effloresced, and the seams present a very different appearance from that of lignite. On cutting into the beds, however, the infiltrations of the gypsum soon disappears. The workings, which are very limited, had been carried out without any system, and much of the lignite had been lost in winning. The quality of the lignite is very satisfactory. It keeps well, and burns with a long flame. Owing to the exceptional conditions under which these deposits can be worked--the seams lying horizontally, and being entirely free from water or deleterious gases--no shafts are required, and the ventilation is a very simple matter. The question of transport is stated to be the chief element of a successful exploitation of these mines, and it will be necessary to construct a light railway to reduce the cost of the present system. The probable profit on the lignite, according to expert’s reports, will depend on the ruling price of coal in Spain: this is determined by that of Cardiff coal and the rate of freight. The calcareous layers are, in several places, comprised of highly aluminius and siliceous limestone, forming a natural cement stone. One of the beds of this material has been exploited in former years for the manufacture of a cement which was somewhat largely used in Lerida for house construction, &c. A cement of this quality is highly suited for constructive work, such as floors, staircases, water tanks, &c., for which very large quantities are used in Spain. It is not, of course, equal to a true Portland cement; but when the various layers of cement stone have been examined and analysed, several of them will be found to approximate very closely to the composition required for giving the true Portland cement. The quantity of cement stones which exist on the property is enormous. In fact, it may be said to be practically inexhaustible.

I have referred in detail to these Almatret Mines because they demonstrate the truth of the contention that the coal districts of Spain are not, as has been erroneously accepted, confined to the province of Oviedo; although, up to the present, little mining has been done outside the Asturian coal basin. Even here the rate of progress is lamentably slow. Lack of capital, which has hitherto retarded the increase of mechanical facilities and railway construction, is now being overcome, and it is confidently expected that a material advance is imminent. Every class of coal is obtainable in this district; and the seams, which vary from two and a-half feet to over six feet in thickness, are being worked by galleries in the mountain sides. In only one instance is the pit system in practice; and the whole of the coal below the level of the base of the mountain is virgin ground, which will ultimately be exploited by deep workings. But it is highly improbable that this profitable industry will be undertaken by the present owners, who, for want of the necessary capital, will, in a large number of cases, suspend operations when they have exhausted the coal from their lower galleries. Valuable concessions will then come into the market at “knock-out” prices; and if British capitalists desire to be associated with the highly-promising enterprise, they will have to seize the opportunity before the French and Belgian investors step in. For, despite their comparative failure in the past, the French capitalists are more keenly alive than their English rivals to the enormous possibilities of Spanish mining, and Spanish money is now coming forward as an earnest of the rejuvenated spirit of enterprise which careful observers have already noted in the spirit of the country.

In the foregoing pages I have outlined, in the barest fashion, the history of the mining industry of Spain from its genesis, and I have cited instances of modern development with the object of proving that in Spain of to-day we have at once one of the most backward and most promising mineral countries in Europe, if not in the world. I have not attempted to exhaust the list of mines that are in full operation at the present time, but have contented myself with giving some particulars about representative properties--properties which, for the most part, have come under my own immediate notice, and several of which I have visited more than once. My experience compels me to the conclusion that Spanish mining offers more and better opportunities for the investment of British capital than that of any other country with which I am acquainted, and I treasure the hope that a closer union will be welded between England and Spain by the common bond of a mutual interest in her mineral development.

_E. Goodman & Son, Phœnix Printing Works, Taunton._

INDEX.

Aben Cencid, 128

African Spain, 86

Avila, 114

Albaycin, The, 136

Alcázar (Toledo), 100

Alfonso VI., 102

Alfonso XIII., 254, _et seq._

Alhambra, The, 122, _et seq._

Alicante, 84, _et seq._

Alluvial Gold Washing in Spain, 300, _et seq._

Alonso II., 203

Alonso el Sabio, 93

Alonso V., 210

Almadén, 119

Alva Garcia, 115

American in Spain, The, 12

Arab Mining Enterprise, 281

Aragonese, 219

Aranjuez, Palace of, 49

Armeria Real (Madrid), 30

Bailen, 93

Barcelona, 50, _et seq._

Barcelona, Labour Riots in, 58

Basque Provincia, The, 180, _et seq._

Beariz and its Tin Mines, 294, 330, _et seq._

Beggars in Spain, 155

Bicycle in Spain, The, 87

Bilbao, 189, _et seq._

Bombita-chico, 234

Borrow, George, 7

Bull-Fighting, 38, 220, _et seq._

Burgos, 108, _et seq._

Cadiz, 164, _et seq._

Cadmus, 269

Carthagena, 88

Carthaginian Miners in Spain, 270

Castellon, 77

Castiles, The, 108, _et seq._

Catalans, The, 53, _et seq._

Cervantes, 116

Charles the Fifth, 124

Children in Spain, 87, 156

Christ in Burgos Cathedral, The, 110

Cid, The, 102, 111

Coal and Cement Mines of Spain, The, 300, 341

Cobham, Lord, 204

Colon Cape (Barcelona), 29

Colonial Possessions, Loss of, 3

Columbus Memorial (Barcelona), 67

Contreras Rafael, 128

Cooking in Spain, 34

Córdova, 103, _et seq._

Coruña, 199, _et seq._

Coruña Copper Mines, The, 329

Crime in Spain, 175

Cuba, 3

Cuenca, 119

Cuidad-Real, 116

Dances, 39, _et seq._

De Amicis E., 25, 106, 127, 253

Decline of Carthaginian Influence, 275

Didorus, 271

Don Carlos, 189

Don Pedro, 210

Don Quixote, 103

Drake, Sir Francis, 204

Elche, 86, 88

English in Spain, The, 11

Escorial, The, 43, _et seq._

Escurial Copper Mines, 293, 307, _et seq._

Espadeno, 77

Esparto Grass, 85

Ferdinand and Isabella, 116, 134

Ferdinand VI., 218

Festival of San Isidro del Campo, 41

Ford, Richard, 101, 159, 163

Francisco Herrera, 218

Frascuelo, 234

Fuentes, 236

Galicia, 195, _et seq._

Gallenga, 71

Gijon, 208

Gold-bearing Alluvials of Spain, 300, _et seq._

Goya, 241

Granada, 122, 134, _et seq._

_Guardia Civil_, 60

Guerrita, 239

Gypsies, 136

Herrera, Juan de, 43

Hiendelæncina Silver Mine, The, 296

_Hotel de Paris_ (Madrid), 26, 34

Huércal Copper-cobalt Mines, 293, 319, _et seq._

Huecar, The, 119

Huerta of Alicante, The, 85

Imperial Cafe (Madrid), 29

Infanta Isabel, 262

Iron Industry, 287

Irun, 185

Jaén, 94

John of Gaunt, 199

Juan the Second, 116

Jucar, The, 119

Kingston Gold Mines, The, 336

La Correspondencia, 38

La Granja, 112

La Mancha, 93

La Princesa de Asturias, 263

La Union, 91

León, 209, 212, _et seq._

_Libro de Oro_, 47

Liebert Wolters, 289

Lomas, John, 95, 150

Lorenzana, Cardinal, 102

Lorenzo, Bishop, 204

Louis de Débonnaire, 77

Lugo, 207

Lugo Goldfields, The, 337

Madrid, 10, _et seq._

_Madrileño, El_, 21

Madrid, Climate of, 14

Malaga, 171, _et seq._

Maria Christina, 254, 258, 263

Mazantini, 235

Medina Az-zahra, 107

Mendicancy in Spain, 155

Mining Enterprise in the Middle Ages, 286

Mining in Spain, 271, _et seq._

Miño River, 204, 207

Monserrat, 70, _et seq._

Moraleja Gold-bearing Alluvial Concession, The, 336

Muleteers, 161, _et seq._

Murcia, 83, _et seq._

Murcians, The, 92

Murillo, Bartolomé Esteban, 152, 167, 246

Murviedro (Sanguntum), 77

Nava Cerrada, 113

Newspapers in Madrid, 38

Northern Spain, In, 195, _et seq._

Nuevalos, 218

Officialism in Spain, 6, 160

Ordoño I., 210

Ordoño II., 211

Orense, 204

Orense and the Tin Industry, 294

Oriedo, 208

Oviedo, 196

_Palacio Real_, (Madrid), 14

_Pantano de Tibi_, 85

Páramo Alluvial Gold Fields, 305, 335

Pasajes de San Juan, 183

_Pasco de Gracia_, 64

Pelota, 183

Philip II., 2, 43

Philip the Fifth, 112

Phœnicians in Galicia, 199

Phœnician Miners in Spain, 270

Picture Gallery, The (Madrid), 30, 241, _et seq._

Pontevedra, 203

Pontevedra Tin Mines, The, 333

Posting, 161, _et seq._

_Puchero_, 37

_Puerta del Diablo_, 114

_Puerta del Sol_, 22, _et seq._

Rafael Contreras, 128

Ramon of Burgundy, 115

Railway Travelling, 157, _et seq._

_Rambla_, The, 63

Recompensa Copper Mines, 318

Rio Rimal Copper Mines, 326, _et seq._

Rio Tinto Mines, 288, _et seq._

Roman Conquest of Spain, 277, 279, _et seq._

Roman Gold-washing Operations, 300

Ronda, 175, _et seq._

Roque Barcia, 91

Royal Palace (Madrid), 33

Sagasta, 264

St. Ferdinand, 93, 94

St. James the Apostle, 203

St. Lawrence, 44

Salamanca, 209, 213

Sanguntum (Murviedro), 77

San Isidro del Campo, Festival of, 41

San Sebastian, 185

Santa Lucia, 91

Santa Maria Silver-lead Mines, 299, 338

Santiago, 200, _et seq._

Segovia, 113, _et seq._

_Sereno, El_, 203

Seville, 141, _et seq._

Sevillians, The, 142

Sierra Nevada, 103

Silver-Lead Mining in Spain, 297 _et seq._

Silver Mines of Spain, The, 296

Singing in Spain, 69

Slaves as Miners, 271, 279

_Soko, El_, 96

Somorrosto Range, 193

Southern Andalusia, In, 164, _et seq._

Spain (Her Position To-day), 8

Spain’s Mineral Resources, 283

Spaniards as Miners, 312

Spaniards, The, 6, _et seq._

Spanish-American War, 6, 56

Spanish Courtesy, 59

Spanish Mining, 271, _et seq._

Spanish Mining Regulations, 319

Spanish Tin Corporation’s Mines, The, 333

Spanish Pride, 3

Spanish Provincialism, 53

Spanish Wines, 75

Sport, 38, 183

Tagus, The, 101

Tarragona, 73

Temperance Question, The, 25

Tharsis Mines, 291

Theatres, 40

Theodimah, 84

Theophile Gautier, 105, 127

Tin Mines of Spain, The, 295

Toledo, 95, _et seq._

Toledo, Juan Bautista de, 43

Tortosa, 76

Trading Spirit, The, 54

Truimfo Mine, The, 297

Valencia, 81, _et seq._

_Velo_, The, 21

Ventura Rodriguex, 218

Velasquez, 242

Vigo, 204

Webster, Rev. Wentworth, 2

Wörmann, 98

Zahira, 107

Zaragoza, 217, _et seq._

THE ALHAMBRA.

THE ALHAMBRA.

THE ALHAMBRA.

THE ALHAMBRA.

THE ALHAMBRA.

THE ALHAMBRA.

THE GENERALIFFE, GRANADA.

THE GENERALIFFE, GRANADA.

VIEWS OF THE GENERALIFFE, GRANADA.

End of Project Gutenberg's Impressions of Spain, by Albert F. Calvert