Silver rush

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A Silver rush is the silver-mining equivalent of a gold rush.

Notable silver rushes have been in Mexico, Argentina, Colorado, Nevada, California, Cobalt, Ontario and the Kootenay district of British Columbia. Several famous tourist towns owe their existence to silver rushes:

Colorado

British Columbia

Ontario Canada

Nevada

Historically there were other "silver rushes", such as on the Attic peninsula near Athens, Greece, thousands of years ago, but the term, when used, is largely a New World phenomenon. Despite the larger-than-life image of "the gold rush", the history of towns and industry in the North American West revolves much more around silver. This is partly because of the other minerals usually found with it - lead, tin, copper - and the more complicated smeltering process associated with it because of the chemical complexity of its ores (usually galena). The line between a smelter town and a silver mining town is very slim in many cases, although copper mining towns typically also have large smelters (such as Anaconda, Montana) and industrial complexes associated with them.

The pursuit for silver often opens up other mineral deposits for development because of the variety of other useful ores that occur with it, especially in galena, its most common natural form. Hence the Boundary Country of British Columbia, just across the international border from Spokane, Washington, had a strong mining and smelting economy based on the non-silver components of galena, and the nearby city of Trail remains a functioning smelter town (long after the long-established industrial complex of the Boundary District has faded into ghost-town status).

Silver workings also tend to last longer than gold mines and so towns last longer and have more time to develop; a gold rush town fades often within a maximum of five years. Silver mining towns typically last a few decades, with time to develop the opulence and luxury that only left the slightest traces in gold-fevered places like Dawson City in the Klondike. By contrast "silver cities" like Aspen, Colorado and Nelson, British Columbia often survived as functioning economies into the era of modernization and the advent of tourism (which has proven richer for some of these towns than any silver mine that had contributed to their economies historically).

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