Lane Mine
A bonanza-grade silver-gold vein system in the Bradshaw Mountains of central Arizona — three parallel veins, one historically mined, the other two untouched.
The case for Lane Mine
The starting point for any review of the project. Three documents — a polished executive summary, a one-page fact sheet of all key numbers, and the original project report — together orient a new reader on the opportunity in roughly thirty minutes.
Six claims, one corridor
A contiguous 123-acre claim block aligned along the northeast-trending vein system, on Prescott National Forest. The KMZ is the authoritative GIS source; the register tabulates each claim with coordinates, area, and tenure references.
A vein system, two-thirds untested
Three parallel quartz veins within an ~18-metre structural corridor in Proterozoic muscovite-biotite granite. Only the centre vein has been historically mined. The geological summary consolidates host rock, structure, mineralisation, and sampling data into a single reference document.
Primary source evidence
The complete primary-data package: AZMILS file (state of Arizona), the 1917 Mark Bradshaw examination report (Exhibit A) with original blueprint plan, USGS MRDS record M004286, and the Lindgren 1926 reference on Jerome and Bradshaw Mountains ore deposits.
The visual walk-through
The seven-page project presentation with location maps, regional mine-distribution context, bedrock geology, claim-block detail, and a summary of historic grades and exploration upside. Designed for first-meeting briefings.
What's covered, what's open
A structured checklist of the items a prospective party would normally review before committing capital — across tenure, geology, workings, production, geophysics, drilling, environmental, infrastructure, commercial, and technical reporting. Items already addressed by data-room materials are marked Available; the rest are Open.