Eldorado Creek Mining Plan of Operations

Denali National Park and Preserve » Eldorado Creek Mining Plan of Operations » Document List

The National Park Service (NPS) is considering approval of a Mining Plan of Operations (MPO) which was submitted by Kris DeVault for the purpose of accessing and conducting a suction dredge placer gold mining operation on the 118 acres of the Liberty #9 and Liberty #13 through #20 (Liberty) unpatented mining claims located on Eldorado Creek in the Kantishna Hills area within the 1980 park additions of Denali National Park and Preserve.

The Environmental Assessment evaluates two alternatives: a No-Action alternative where the MPO would not be approved, and Alternative 2, approval of the MPO for ten years as submitted, with NPS stipulations to protect natural and cultural resources. The MPO includes the use of a 6 inch and 8 inch hose to suction gravels and gold from the bedrock of the streambed. Cobbles and boulders above the bedrock would be moved a few feet downstream to create a small pool upstream where the suction dredging would take place. The material suctioned off the stream bottom would be passed through the hose to a sluice box floating in the pool, where the gold would be separated out from the sand and gravel. The work would move slowly upstream, filling in (reclaiming) the pool behind the completed work, and work could progress on anywhere from 100 to 800 linear feet of streambed per season.

The claims cover about 1.5 miles of streambed and the claims start about 1.5 miles upstream of Kantishna. The MPO also includes making the historic Eldorado Tractor Road usable for vehicle traffic. A flood in June 2014 damaged the road, and an excavator is proposed to be used to clear boulders, smooth the driving surface, and re-establish ramps at the 20 crossings of Eldorado Creek. DeVault would use the historic Comstock Cabin on the claims for housing and would erect a couple of temporary tents for storage of equipment.

The stipulations include seasonal starting and stopping dates that would protect the migration of Arctic grayling in Eldorado Creek to and from a reach of Eldorado Creek upstream of the claims that is highly productive for macroinvertebrates.


Contact Information

The public comment period ends on June 2, 2016. To comment on the Environmental Assessment, please use the comment option on this site. For more information contact Steve Carwile, park Compliance Officer, at 907-644-3612, or steve_carwile@nps.gov.