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  2. Eagle Mine (Michigan) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eagle_Mine_(Michigan)

    The mine is located on the Yellow Dog Plains in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan in the United States. Eagle is the only primary nickel mine in the United States . The mine began production in fall 2014 and is expected to produce 440 million pounds of nickel, 429 million pounds of copper and small amounts of other metals (platinum, palladium ...

  3. List of mines in Michigan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_mines_in_Michigan

    Name County Years Material Coordinates Adventure mine: Ontonagon: 1850–1920: copper: Alabastine Mine: Kent: 1907– gypsum: Arcadian mine: Houghton: 1898–1908: copper

  4. Quincy Mine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quincy_Mine

    The mine was the first Michigan copper mine to switch from fissure mining to amygdaloid mining, when the recently discovered Pewabic amygdaloid lode was found to cross Quincy property in 1856. [9] High-grade fissure veins contained large, pure masses of copper, but the masses could take days or even months to extract, at high cost.

  5. Gogebic Range - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gogebic_Range

    Iron mines of the era exploited the "natural" (soft) iron-rich ores in a 15 kilometer-long stretch in the central portion of the range straddling the Michigan-Wisconsin state line. These mines were mainly of the underground shaft type, which were among the deepest iron mines in the country.

  6. Back Forty Mine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Back_Forty_Mine

    The Back Forty Mine is a proposed open-pit metallic sulfide mine targeting gold and zinc deposits in Menominee County in the South Central part of Michigan's Upper Peninsula next to the Menominee River. Aquila Resources submitted its first permit applications to the state of Michigan in 2015. [1]

  7. Copper mining in Michigan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copper_mining_in_Michigan

    Copper knife, spearpoints, awls, and spade made from copper deposits mined by Native Americans in Wisconsin from the Late Archaic period, 3000 BC-1000 BC.. Native Americans were the first to mine and work the copper of Lake Superior and the Keweenaw Peninsula of northern Michigan between 5000 BCE and 1200 BCE.

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  9. List of deepest mines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_deepest_mines

    This list of deepest mines includes operational and non-operational mines that are at least 2,212 m (7,257 ft), which is the depth of Veryovkina Cave, the deepest known natural cave in the world. The depth measurements in this list represent the difference in elevation from the entrance of the mine to the deepest excavated point.