A swath of northeast Minnesota has long been called the iron range, but some prospectors are hoping it might someday be known as the gold range.
Officials with the state Department of Natural Resources have found promising results in tests from soil near Tower and Soudan pointing to possible gold in bedrock there.
The samples contained an encouraging number of tiny gold grains that are rough, meaning they likely originated from a nearby source. Smooth grains indicate that they were worn smooth while traveling in glacier movement. Though the discovery is still a far cry from finding actual gold deposits, officials warn, it's also not surprising to geologists who have long suspected northern Minnesota is golden.
"Particularly when we're considering gold potential, the bedrock in northern Minnesota is the same bedrock units found across the border in Ontario," said Don Elsenheimer, an economic geologist with the DNR. "On the Canadian side, there are dozens of active and past producing gold mines."
It's been harder to find the gold deposits in Minnesota, though, because it has fewer outcrops or spots where rock sticks out on the earth's surface.
In addition, the gold deposits in that type of terrain are typically vertical, possibly extending 2,500 or 3,000 feet deep, making them difficult to pinpoint on the surface, Elsenheimer explained.
Samples promising
So geologists are collecting sediment instead to see if there are tiny grains of gold that are rough and plentiful.
In typical 2-gallon-bucket samples of soil around the state, each about 20 pounds, experts may typically find one gold grain.