• Source: Fine Gold Creek
    • Fine Gold Creek, in Fine Gold Gulch, is a creek in a gulch in Madera County, California that is a river tributary of the San Joaquin River.
      It is approximately 18 miles (29 km) from its mouth on the San Joaquin through where it has two forks to its headwaters.
      Like Coarse Gold Gulch in the same county and many other places in California, its name derives simply from the practice of gold mining.


      Course and tributaries


      The mouth of Fine Gold itself is roughly 3 miles (4.8 km) north-east of where Fort Miller used to be (which is now under Millerton Lake).
      The headwaters of the main Creek are on the south slope of Thornberry Mountain at 4,000 feet (1,200 m) above sea level, and its course downstream is overall in a south-westwards direction to the San Joaquin with a fall of 3,600 feet (1,100 m) along its length downstream of its tributaries.

      Its minor tributaries are largely ephemeral, drying up in the summer.
      Most of its length comprises long lengths of sand-bottomed creek bed connecting a few rocky pools, which are between 1 and 2 metres deep in the summer months.
      The total area of the Creek drainage basin is 90 square miles (23,000 ha), and the basin's northern boundary is at 4,400 feet (1,300 m) above sea level.
      A reservoir on the Creek was considered in 2005, with water to be pumped from Millerton Lake or the San Joaquin, or even through a tunnel from Kerckhoff Lake, and supplemented by the inflow from Fine Gold itself.
      Madera Irrigation District had considered a similar project in 1991, and discarded it because of the pumping requirement.


      Ecology


      The environs of Fine Gold comprise woodland foothills, mainly oak, digger pines, and willows, interspersed with occasional grassland and riparian habitat that includes Fraxinus latifolia, and various Populus, Salix, and Cephalanthus species.
      This is fairly well developed at the upstream end of the Creek.
      Vegetation to be found in the streambed includes Polypogon monspeliensis, some Mimulus and Cyperus species, Mentha pulegium, and clover.
      Fish are mainly non-native species in the Creek basin, with the Sacramento sucker and hitch and the California roach found in the Creek.
      The river banks have been damaged by grazing in places, and the grazing, local roads, and the construction of the Millerton Lake, from which fish like the green sunfish invade the Creek, have reduced the Creek's biodiversity.
      The whole watershed had been designated an Aquatic Diversity Management Area of the Sierra Nevada Ecosystem Project.
      At the mouth of the Creek, where it is inundated by Millerton Lake, the river banks are moderately steep.
      There are eight special status plant species in the Creek watershed, and Ambystoma californiense, western spadefoot, and western pond turtle have been recorded there.


      Demographics and transport


      The Creek watershed is sparsely populated, with access roads to farms, and scattered housing with mostly single-family homes.
      It is traversed by Hidden Lake Boulevard, Ralston Way, and County Road 210.
      Where it joins Millerton Lake, County Road 216 provides access to a small residential area named Hidden View, and Hidden Lake Estates.


      = Native people

      =
      The lower part of the Creek is part of the traditional territory of the Mono Native American people of North Fork, with the upper part in traditional Chukchansi Yokuts territory although the Chukchansi largely live nowadays in the Picayune Rancheria area at Coarsegold.
      There were Mono hamlets in the lower part.
      The Dalinchi Yokuts's traditional territory encompassed lower Fine Gold, O'Neals, and part of Coarse Gold Gulch, and the Dumna Yokuts's traditional territory ran along the north bank of the San Joaquin and included the mouth of Fine Gold.


      Archaeology


      There are three known archaeological sites on the Creek, one a standing two-story house.


      Mining


      Mining in the area is documented in Robert A. Eccleston's diary of the Mariposa War, and Eccleston himself mined there shortly after the war.
      Eccleston recorded little success, unlike N. H. Stockton who in September and October 1850 claimed to have made more than US$30 (equivalent to $1,099 in 2023) per day some days in his journal.
      Fine Gold Creek divided the Hildreth Mining District on the west from the Fresno Mining District on the east.
      In an 1894 survey, the California State Mining bureau recorded, amongst others:

      Quartz mines:
      the Bessie H. Mine on Fine Gold operated by E. Wright of Pollasky
      the Columbus Mine on North Fork operated by J. Morrison and F. Nimes of Coarsegold
      the Crabtree Mine on North Fork operated by T. Jones of Coarsegold
      the Fine Gold Mine and the Starbuck Mine on Fine Gold operated by Mark Anderson of O'Neals, the former 3.5 miles (5.6 km) to the north-east of the O'Neals post office
      the Henrietta Mine and Lottie K Mine on Fine Gold owned by J. A. Harris and W. Reed of Pollasky
      the Margarite Mine on Fine Gold owned by Charles Baker et al. of O'Neals
      the Pray Mine on Fine Gold owned by D. McLellan and Charles Melvin of Coarsegold
      Placer mines:
      the Achsah D. Mine on Fine Gold operated by C. B. Holstead of Pollasky
      the Bowdler Mine on Fine Gold operated by J. M. Bowles of Hildreth
      the Combination Claim on Fine Gold operated by J. W. Strathan of Hildreth
      Little Willie's Mine on Fine Gold owned by G. P. Gunter of Pollasky


      References




      Sources




      Further reading

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