Cat Town, California

Cat Town
Cat Town
Location in California
Cat Town
Cat Town (the United States)
Coordinates: 37°38′40″N 120°05′22″W / 37.64444°N 120.08944°W / 37.64444; -120.08944
CountryUnited States
StateCalifornia
CountyMariposa
Settledc. 1850s
Elevation
2,254 ft (687 m)

Cat Town is a ghost town and former gold mining camp in Mariposa County, California. It was established during the 1850s California Gold Rush and gave its name to the Cat Town Mining District, a gold-bearing area recognized in California Division of Mines and Geology inventories of the Mother Lode region.[1][2]

History

Gold Rush origins

Cat Town developed as a small placer mining camp in Solomon Gulch during the 1850s, part of the broader expansion of mining settlements in Mariposa County during the early Gold Rush period.[1][2]

Cat Town Mining District

The Cat Town Mining District is described in the California Division of Mines and Geology's statewide inventory of gold districts as lying between the Coulterville and Kinsley districts.[1] Mining activity in the district began with placer deposits and later shifted to lode mining, with intermittent underground development continuing into the twentieth century.[2]

Bowen and Gray (1957) describe the district's mines as exploiting gold-bearing quartz veins in the metamorphic rocks of the western Sierra Nevada foothills.[2]

Decline

As placer deposits were depleted, Cat Town did not develop into a permanent town and declined as a settlement, though mining in the surrounding district continued sporadically during later periods of renewed gold production.[2][1]

Geography

Cat Town is located in the western foothills of the Sierra Nevada in upper Solomon Gulch at an elevation of approximately 2,254 feet (687 m).[2][1]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Clark, William B. (1970). Gold Districts of California. Bulletin 193. California Division of Mines and Geology. p. 142.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Bowen, O.E. Jr.; Gray, C.H. Jr. (1957). "Mines and mineral resources of Mariposa County, California". California Journal of Mines and Geology. 53 (1–2): 35–343.