Box 5
Folder 3. Treasure – Wyoming
Item 1. Newspaper Clippings

Transcribed Text (OCR)
GARY MANGIACOPA ARCHIVE ============================================================ Title: B5F3I1 Slug: b5f3i1 Categories: Lost Treasure Source: https://garymangiacopraarchive.com/b5f3i1 Pages: 4 scanned, 4 extracted OCR: Google Vision API (document_text_detection) Processed: 2026-06-06 ============================================================ Old fort dug up in Wyo. CASPER, Wyo. (AP) Ar- chaeologists have unearthed Seminoe Fort, a trading post on the Oregon Trail that shel- tered Mormon pioneers dur- ing a deadly blizzard in 1856 and went undetected for 140 years. Founded by fur trader Charles "Seminoe" Lajue nesse around 1852, the post was located where the Oregon and Mormon trails converged southwest of present-day Casper. "For 140 years no one's known where it was," said Danny Walker, assistant state archaeologist. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints initiated the search for the fort so it could be reconstructed and in- cluded as part of a visitor's center. About 150 Mormon pio- neers from Iowa, members of Edward Martin's Handcart Co., died of hunger and cold along the Oregon Trail during a blizzard in 1856, one of the worst tragedies of American overland migration. Some died at or near the fort that gave shelter to others. The survivors were eventually reached by rescuers from Salt Lake Valley. Using an 1857 map and so- phisticated equipment, work- ers found areas of magnetic anomalies indicating possible building foundations in a hay field. In May, the first rem- nants were found. So far, the 35 crew members camped at the site have located three of at least six cabins believed to have been part of the fort. The church would like to reconstruct the buildings as accurately as possible. For now, digging has stopped be- cause funding ran out Satur- day. Walker said he is hopeful money can be found to contin- ue the excavation. Seacrest RETIREMENT CENTER •Luxurious ocean-front and ocean-view accommodations Special programs for those with memory impairment. • Tradition of continuous ownership and service since 1971 Call for complimentary luncheon and tour: [AD] 203-931-2510 www.seacrestretirementcenter.com Exit 41 off of I-95 CONNECTICUT POST TUESDAY BRIDGEPORT, COM 3 July 2001 page C5 calan 1-2 [PAGE BREAK] CONN TICUT POST, BRIDGEPORT, CONN_3 July 2001 page c5cal 1-2 Old fort dug up in Wyo. CASPER, Wyo. (AP) Ar- chaeologists have unearthed Seminoe Fort, a trading post on the Oregon Trail that shel- tered Mormon pioneers dur- ing a deadly blizzard in 1856 and went undetected for 140 years. Founded by fur trader Charles "Seminoe" Lajue- nesse around 1852, the post was located where the Oregon and Mormon trails converged southwest of present-day Casper. "For 140 years no one's known where it was," said Danny Walker, assistant state archaeologist. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints initiated the search for the fort so it could be reconstructed and in- cluded as part of a visitor's center. About 150 Mormon pio- neers from Iowa, members of Edward Martin's Handcart Co., died of hunger and cold along the Oregon Trail during a blizzard in 1856, one of the worst tragedies of American overland migration. Some died at or near the fort that gave shelter to others. The survivors were eventually reached by rescuers from Salt Lake Valley. Using an 1857 map and so- phisticated equipment, work- ers found areas of magnetic anomalies indicating possible building foundations in a hay field. In May, the first rem- nants were found. So far, the 35 crew members camped at the site have located three of at least six cabins believed to have been part of the fort. The church would like to reconstruct the buildings as accurately as possible. For now, digging has stopped be- cause funding ran out Satur- day. Walker said he is hopeful money can be found to contin- ue the excavation. [PAGE BREAK] Hawaii Tribune-Herald, Monday, July 28, 2002-9 Prospectors lured by gold, gems Wyoming invites folks to stake their claim and dig away By Krystyn Freidlin Associated Press They GILLETTE, Wyo. sparkle, they dazzle, they're valu- able and Wyoming has them in and on the ground almost everywhere. Gold and precious gems abound in the Cowboy State where prospectors can still stake claims and dig for natural treasure as long as they know what to look for. Diamonds, iolites, rubies, sap- phires, aquamarine, emeralds, jade and gold are only a few of the treasures discovered in Wyoming by geologists, and recreational and commercial prospectors. Wyoming is one of 19 states left in the United States with federal lands where mining sites still can be discovered and claimed. Gillette resident Larry McEachron and friend Darrel Layton have a joint claim near Associated Press Prospector Larry McEachron shows off cut and uncut aquamarine stones he found at his claim in the Bighorn Mountains in Wyoming. Powder River Pass west of Buf- falo where they have extracted hundreds of carats of aquama- rine and a few garnets. They vis- it their claim every few weeks in the summer or whenever they can "find the time and money to go," McEachron said. "We camp out up there and even when we don't find any- thing, we have a lot of fun. It's beautiful up there. Every time we find a gem, everything else stops just stand and hold it up to look at it. It's a great feeling," McEachron said. He's been a gem collector for many years. Wyoming's surface is underlain by ancient continental crust called craton, known to geologists as the Wyoming Province, where it is exposed in many of the moun- tain ranges. The Wyoming craton is more than 2 billion years old in places. and there has been a lot of precious minerals and metals-forming geologic activity during that time. Gem geologist Dan Hausel has identified several collecting regions throughout the state. Each region is detailed in his book "Gemstones and other unique minerals and rocks of Wyoming: A field guide for collectors. "The trick is knowing what to look for," Hausel said. Rubies, for example, are some- times found in rocks surrounded by the dark green minerals zoisite and fuchsite, which "replaces" the rubies. Peridot, the light green August birthstone, is often found as out- er coverings on ant hills. When the peridot falls out of eroded rock, the ants carry the stones back to the ant hills- - no need to dig, just pick them off the hill. [PAGE BREAK] Who needs diamonds? Associated Press ABOVE: Willie Rios of Boulder, Colo., stakes a claim in the Rattlesnake Hills of Wyoming. BELOW: A claim stake. Prospectors search for opal Gem hunters stake claims after Wyoming site is identified Associated Press The scat- SWEETWATER STATION, Wyo. tershot markers of different sizes and colors stand out among the sagebrush with nothing more than a lonely, sauntering wild horse as far as the eye can see. Over here is a 4-by-4 stake spray-painted pink and yellow on the top with rocks painted the same colors at its base. "Giddy Up and Go 3-4-05" is written in black marker on one side. Bird droppings mark the flat top of the post. Over there is another stake, bearing a clip- board bound with duct tape; written on the board: "2 claims Total Size 200 yds x 500 yds." The markers are monuments to a 21st-cen- tury rush of prospectors. They descended on this remote, hilly area in south-central Wyoming last March with dreams of striking it rich by finding a precious gemstone called opal. The rush caught federal officials off guard, resulted in a bureaucratic paper jam that has delayed actual mining and prompted authori- ties to take measures to protect an endangered flower from being trampled. Opal is considered the most colorful of all gemstones, and the best opal gems are more valuable than diamonds, fetching up to $10,000 a carat, according to the International Colored Gemstone Association. NEW HAVEN REGISTER CONN JWeUEVER RWCLIEVER 1 Claims TOTAL SIZE 2004ds 500s bea 3-18-05 51 The Wyoming opal site - a three-square- mile area about 100 miles west of Casper was initially discovered by a local rockhound who told the State Geological Survey, which undertook a more extensive survey and found large deposits of opal. Most of the opal is "com- mon opal," which isn't worth much. But geolo- gists found some of the highly valued "precious opal," leading them to conclude that there was more to be found. Fremont County Clerk Julie Freese said her office received 1,048 mining claims over a nearly two-month period. 28 May 2005 Saturday pageEl, cl 2-3



