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Rush was a true influence to North Arkansas and the Buffalo River Valley<ref> http://asmsa.org/armem/virtual_tour2002/NoelTyler/research_paper.htm</ref>.
Rush was a true influence to North Arkansas and the Buffalo River Valley<ref> http://asmsa.org/armem/virtual_tour2002/NoelTyler/research_paper.htm</ref>.

==References==
{{reflist|2}}

Revision as of 02:30, 13 January 2009

The best known and most prolific zinc mining region of north Arkansas for many years was the Rush Creek district of Marion County[1]. Its history began when John Wolfer--an early prospector along the Buffalo River--discovered a large deposit of zinc on the creek in souther Marion County. George Chase purchased Wolfer's claim and established the Morning Star Mining Company, which eventually became one of the largest producers of zinc in Arkansas [2]. One day a miner at the Morning Star Mine extracted a single mass of pure zinc carbonate weighing 12,750 pounds [3].

The miners originally thought that they were mining silver. They soon discovered that the “silver” that they were mining was not actually silver; it was zinc. Two to five thousand people lived in Rush creek during the boom period, during World War I[4]The people took all the Zinc that was mined and turned it into dynamite.

Rush was a true influence to North Arkansas and the Buffalo River Valley[5].

References

  1. ^ http://www.rockhoundingar.com/locations/rush.html
  2. ^ Rafferty, Milton (2001), The ozarks, Fayetteville: University of Arkansas Press, ISBN 1-55728-714-7
  3. ^ http://www.ozarkmountains.org/rush.htm
  4. ^ http://asmsa.org/armem/virtual_tour2002/NoelTyler/research_paper.htm
  5. ^ http://asmsa.org/armem/virtual_tour2002/NoelTyler/research_paper.htm