
A dusty group of borax miners pose for a photo. Photo from NPS archives.
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Desert riches
Since ancient times, borax and other borate minerals have
been used in the Near East and Asia as an antiseptic, a washing agent,
and welding flux. Europeans were not introduced to borates until the 13th
century, when Marco Polo returned from Asia with borax crystals. However,
borax remained a rare commodity until rich lakebed deposits were found
in California and Nevada in the 1850's and 60's.
By the 1870's, an expanding market for borax motivated
miners to search for new deposits in the desert playas
of California and Nevada. In 1881, Rosie and Aaron Winters discovered
borax on the Death
Valley playa at the mouth of Furnace Creek wash in
Death Valley.

Mule team loading up at Harmony Borax Works. Photo from NPS archives.
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Borax mining in Death Valley
Death Valley's first commercial borax operation began in 1881 at the Eagle
Borax Works. W. T. Coleman's Harmony Borax Works followed in 1882 and the
town of Greenland was built. This early outpost was later to become the
modern Furnace Creek Ranch. Harmony played a central role in the opening
of Death Valley and the subsequent popularity of the Furnace Creek area.
Ore production began in late 1883 or early 1884. When
in full operation, the Harmony Borax Works employed
forty men. These hardy workers scraped cottonball borax from
the surface of the playa, producing three tons of borax daily. |