A fact from Treasure Mountain (Colorado) appeared on Wikipedia's
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Napoleon Bonaparte
The original name was Citadel Mountain. An expedition was organized by Napoleon Bonaparte in New Orleans to satisfy rumors of gold heard in the French courts. The Louisiana Purchase being at stake and Bonaparte needing financing for his ambitions caused him to finance this expedition. [1] [2]
References
Bibliography
French Expeditions
In late 1700s, 300 men and 450 horses left Levenworth, Kansas in a French expedition to the Rocky Mountains. Near Wolf Creek Pass (close to Summitville) a large amount of gold was discovered and amassed by the expedition. Indians at first not hostile, eventually became hostile and the French buried the gold and escaped the area. One lone survivor by the name of LaBlanc made it back to Kansas. He was the expedition's historian and had made two maps of the hidden treasure, one of which he brought back to France, the other he kept. A later expedition also failed at finding the treasure. [1] William Yule, many years later, possessed an alleged copy of the original map and explored the area wherein is found his namesake south and west of the mountain at Yule Lakes and Yule Creek. To the east at the headwaters is Yule Pass.
Yule Marble, Building Stone of the Lincoln Memorial
The quality and durability of the Yule marble was questioned prior to the building of the Lincoln Memorial as was the recently opened quarry's ability to provide the quantity and size required for construction. [2]
The Colorado Yule marble (a.k.a. Yule Colorado marble) comes from the Leadville Limestone of Mississippian age. [3] It was formed by contact metamorphism in the Tertiary period following the intrusion and uplift of nearby granitic Treasure Mountain dome. [4]
References
Bibliography
McGee, Elaine S. Colorado Yule Marble - Building Stone of the Lincoln Memorial. U.S. Geological Survey Bulletin 2162. Washington: United States Government Printing Office, 1999.
I liked the phrasing in the original, but I had to go with the wikistandard and redo the lead a bit. I took out the UN number, I'm not sure what this was? Also, maybe the photo could do with a bit of a crop? The Interior (Talk) 06:40, 12 September 2012 (UTC)
Thanks for concerted efforts in making this article and remove it from the wanted list at WP:Colorado.
Is there is no whisper of this "expedition" in any archive? Or is it all local "historians" and Chambers of Commerce?-- Wetman ( talk) 02:08, 21 September 2012 (UTC)
A fact from Treasure Mountain (Colorado) appeared on Wikipedia's
Main Page in the
Did you know column on 21 September 2012, and was viewed approximately 1,270 times (
disclaimer) (
check views). The text of the entry was as follows:
|
This article is rated C-class on Wikipedia's
content assessment scale. It is of interest to the following WikiProjects: | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
In order to expand this article for creation, additional content material will be added.
Bibliography
Napoleon Bonaparte
The original name was Citadel Mountain. An expedition was organized by Napoleon Bonaparte in New Orleans to satisfy rumors of gold heard in the French courts. The Louisiana Purchase being at stake and Bonaparte needing financing for his ambitions caused him to finance this expedition. [1] [2]
References
Bibliography
French Expeditions
In late 1700s, 300 men and 450 horses left Levenworth, Kansas in a French expedition to the Rocky Mountains. Near Wolf Creek Pass (close to Summitville) a large amount of gold was discovered and amassed by the expedition. Indians at first not hostile, eventually became hostile and the French buried the gold and escaped the area. One lone survivor by the name of LaBlanc made it back to Kansas. He was the expedition's historian and had made two maps of the hidden treasure, one of which he brought back to France, the other he kept. A later expedition also failed at finding the treasure. [1] William Yule, many years later, possessed an alleged copy of the original map and explored the area wherein is found his namesake south and west of the mountain at Yule Lakes and Yule Creek. To the east at the headwaters is Yule Pass.
Yule Marble, Building Stone of the Lincoln Memorial
The quality and durability of the Yule marble was questioned prior to the building of the Lincoln Memorial as was the recently opened quarry's ability to provide the quantity and size required for construction. [2]
The Colorado Yule marble (a.k.a. Yule Colorado marble) comes from the Leadville Limestone of Mississippian age. [3] It was formed by contact metamorphism in the Tertiary period following the intrusion and uplift of nearby granitic Treasure Mountain dome. [4]
References
Bibliography
McGee, Elaine S. Colorado Yule Marble - Building Stone of the Lincoln Memorial. U.S. Geological Survey Bulletin 2162. Washington: United States Government Printing Office, 1999.
I liked the phrasing in the original, but I had to go with the wikistandard and redo the lead a bit. I took out the UN number, I'm not sure what this was? Also, maybe the photo could do with a bit of a crop? The Interior (Talk) 06:40, 12 September 2012 (UTC)
Thanks for concerted efforts in making this article and remove it from the wanted list at WP:Colorado.
Is there is no whisper of this "expedition" in any archive? Or is it all local "historians" and Chambers of Commerce?-- Wetman ( talk) 02:08, 21 September 2012 (UTC)