Steam-Powered Arrastra at Cerbat Camp


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W. H. Williscraft Unknown 1600.0173.0002.jpg M - 173 B&W 1600-0173-0002 m173pb Stereograph Print 3.5x7.5 Historic Photographs 1890s Reproduction requires permission. Digital images property of SHM Library & Archives

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Williscraft and Barry steam-powered Arrastra at Cerbat, Mohave County, Arizona Territory. The camp was in the foothills of the Cerbat Mountains in northwest Arizona.

An arrastra was a primitive method used to crush ore into a fine enough powder so that precious ores could be separated from host rock. Arrastras (also “rastra” or “arastra”) had their origins in Mexico. These devices consisted of a flat track of stone inside a low wall of rock or wood, a retaining basin to capture and hold the ore, and a center post and horizontal shaft made of wood or from small tree trunks. The ease by which they were built and operated made them ideally suited to small mining operations. Powered by horse or mule, the shaft would drag one or more large stones in a circular path on top of the flat stone base, crushing the ore that has been placed in the basin. Mercury was added to the resulting mix to help capture the gold as it was separated from the pulverized rock. When water was plentiful, flumes and water wheels were often used instead of animal-power. More elaborate arrastra mills that were often housed in a building and powered by water from flumes or, in this picture, by steam power. Arrastras were replaced by much larger and more complex milling methods and machinery and stamp mills replaced arrastras at most mines when adequate capital was available.

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