Online Encyclopedia

BLACK HILLS

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V04, Page 22 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BLACK HILLS  , an isolated
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group of mountains, covering an
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area of about 6000 sq. m. in the adjoining corners of South Dakota and
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Wyoming, U.S.A . They rise on an
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average some 2000 ft. above their
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base, the highest
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peak, Harney, having an altitude above the sea of 7216 ft . They are drained and in large
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part enclosed by the North (or Belle Fourche) and South forks of the Cheyenne
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river (at whose junction a fur-trading
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post was established about 1830) ; and are surrounded by semi-arid, alkaline plains lying 3000 to 3500 ft. above the sea . The mass has an elliptical shape, its long axis, which extends nearly N.N.W.-S.S.E., being about 120 M. and its shorter axis about 40 M. long . The hills are formed by a short, broad, anticlinal
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fold, which is flat or nearly so on its
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summit . From this fold the stratified beds have in large part been removed, the more
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recent having been almost entirely eroded from the elevated mass . The edges of these are now found encircling the mountains and forming a series of fairly continuous rims of hogbacks . The carboniferous and older stratified beds still cover the west
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half of the hills, while from the east half they have been removed, exposing the granite . Scientific exploration began in 1849, and systematic
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geological investigation about 1875 . Rich gold placers had already been discovered, and in 1875 the
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Sioux Indians within whose territory the hills had until then been included, were removed, and the lands were open to white settlers . Subsequently low-grade
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quartz mines were found and
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developed, and have furnished a notable part of the gold supply of the country (about $100,000,000 from 1875 to 1901) . The output is to-day relatively small in comparison with that of many other fields, but there are one or two permanent gold mines of
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great value working low-grade ore .

The

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silver product from 1879 to 1901 was about $4,154,000 . Deposits of copper, tin, iron and tungsten have been discovered, and a variety of other
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mineral products (
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graphite,
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mica,
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spodumene,
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coal, petroleum, &c.) . In sharp contrast to the surrounding plains the
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climate is subhumid, especially in the higher Harney region . There is an abundance of fertile
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soil and magnificent grazing
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land . A third of the
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total area is covered with forests of pine and other trees, which have for the most part been made a
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forest-reserve by the
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national government . Jagged crags, sudden abysses, magnificent canyons, forests with open parks, undulating hills, mountain prairies, freaks of weathering and erosion, and the enclosing lines of the successive hog-backs afford scenery of remarkable variety and wild beauty . There are several interesting
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limestone caverns, and Sylvan Lake, in the high mountain
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district, is an important resort . See the publications of the
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United States Geological Survey (especially Professional Paper No . 26, Economic Resources of the
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Northern Black Hills, 1904), and of the South Dakota School of Mines (Bulletin No . 4, containing a
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history and bibliography of Black Hills investigations) ; also R . L . Dodge, The Black Hills: A Minute Description .

(New

York, 1876) .

End of Article: BLACK HILLS
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