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  2. Ducktown Basin Museum and Burra Burra Mine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ducktown_Basin_Museum_and...

    The Burra Burra Mine is a copper mine located in Ducktown, Tennessee, in the southeastern United States.Named for the famous mine in Australia, the Burra Burra Mine is located in the Copper Basin geological region, and extracted over 15 million tons (14 million metric tons) of copper ore during its 60 years of operation between 1899 and 1959.

  3. Australian Cornish Mining Sites - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Australian_Cornish_Mining...

    The Australian Cornish Mining Sites are historic sites in South Australia listed jointly on the Australian National Heritage List. There are two distinct sites – Burra in the mid-north of the state and Moonta Mines in the northern Yorke Peninsula region. The heritage value of both sites relates to their history as mines worked by migrant miners from Cornwall. The sites were inscribed on the ...

  4. Burra Burra Mine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burra_Burra_Mine

    Burra Burra Mine may refer to: The Burra Burra Mine — an historic (1845 – 1877) copper mine located in Burra, South Australia The Burra Burra Mine (Tennessee) — a copper mine located in Ducktown, Tennessee, United States , and named after the Australian mine

  5. Copper Basin (Tennessee) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copper_Basin_(Tennessee)

    Mining machine parts and tools scattered about the Burra Burra Mine site. The Ducktown Basin Museum was established in 1978 by a group of local citizens intent on preserving the legacy of the Copper Basin. The museum was moved to the building that formerly housed the headquarters of the Tennessee Copper Company at the Burra Burra Mine in 1982.

  6. Burra, South Australia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burra,_South_Australia

    The Burra Burra Copper Mine was established in 1848 mining the copper deposit discovered in 1845. Miners and townspeople migrated to Burra primarily from Cornwall, Wales, Scotland and Germany. The mine first closed in 1877, briefly opened again early in the 20th century and for a last time from 1970 to 1981.

  7. Henry Roach - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_Roach

    The northern half became the Burra Mine, one of the world's largest copper mines. [1] Most of the miners and specialists at the Burra mine were from Cornwall, with 1,000 workers at one point. [4] Roach was soon made captain at the Burra mine in charge of the underground workings, and then made chief captain of all mine operations. [1]

  8. Lure of Anglo's copper mines could test BHP's spending resolve

    www.aol.com/news/lure-anglos-copper-mines-could...

    BHP outlined plans to invest between $10 billion and $14.7 billion within 10 years to extract more copper from its giant Escondida mine, where output is forecast to decline, and from the smaller ...

  9. Samuel Stocks, jun. - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samuel_Stocks,_jun.

    It was at a time of economic gloom but he invested heavily in the South Australian Mining Association which was prospecting for copper at Burra, north of Adelaide. Their company (nicknamed "Snobs" – Captain Allen and Messrs. Stocks, Beck, Hallett, Bunce, Penny, Graham, Featherstone, Waterhouse, Sanders, Peacock, Drew, Bouch, Smith, and others ...