Here is the intro:
Lyra
Winter the main character in the Novel and she is
the Author’s grand daughter, three years old at the time Talking Ice was
published. It is an actual account of small scale mining methods on
working claims and the story is set twenty two years in the future. The
Action/Adventure, Fiction is the story of a young woman who inherits
mining claims on the Kenai Peninsula and all the dangers of mining and
those who would do anything for the price of Gold.
Locations on the creek, named by previous owners
after special events or earlier gold discoveries have been carried through the
years along with some history of the claims. Placer Bluff is at the opposite
side of the main camp on the first claim, in an area that was mined by
hydraulic methods. Three hundred yards up the trail is Mastel’s Dig, a large
area of exposed large rocks and boulders and gravel where the most recent
previous owner mined two half gallon jars of “wheat size,” gold, prior to 1990.
Dead Dog bluff is a location just past the Mastel
Dig, on the right side of the trail, overlooking the creek, still using the creek, left or right
designations as a reference, where a previous owner buried his dog. Midway
into the next claim going north is Seven Hundred, an area on the left side of
the trail on the first shelve where seven hundred ounces may have been mined
using placer methods with machinery and possibly even high pressure pumps.
No
records were found to authenticate the
existence of the Chinese mine, but as all legend goes, it may have
existed and
might have been buried rather than continue the risk of a cave in. The
large
deposit of black Slate where the mine may have been located is so
unstable, it
would have been dangerous work to keep it open or even dig. The
fictional
account of the Chinese mine in this work of fiction was a result of
conversations around a late night campfire and speculation about where
the mine
may have been located. The "Talking Ice," is located on the lakes West
of the Authors home. The ice resounds in the deep of winter and brings
images of eerie shapes and wisps moving over the ice. The sounds can be
heard in the bedrooms at night and have been known to influence dreams.
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