Rio Tinto, Nevada
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Rio Tinto is a ghost town in
Elko County Elko County is a county in the northeastern corner of Nevada, United States. As of the 2020 census, the population was 53,702. Its county seat is Elko. The county was established on March 5, 1869, from Lander County. Elko County is the fourth ...
, Nevada in the United States.


History

Rio Tinto was one of the last mining boom towns. It was named after the prosperous copper mines in Andalusia, Spain that produced ore for 3,000 years.. The discovery of copper mines near Rio Tinto is credited to Franklyn Hunt, who had explored in the west for many years. Hunt had found traces of copper a few miles from
Mountain City, Nevada Mountain City is a small census-designated place in Elko County, Nevada, United States, within the Mountain City Ranger District of the Humboldt-Toiyabe National Forest. The community, located on State Route 225 approximately south of the Idah ...
. He had claimed his discovery, but no one except the brothers Walt and Jack Davidson had enough faith in Hunt to grub stake him. For years, Hunt predicted that ore would be found at . He found copper in 1932. This information spread and started a rush in the area, including creation of the town. Rio Tinto was not affected by the onset of World War II. The decline of the mine began after the end of the war: the price of copper had decreased and the mine became unprofitable. All operations had ceased by 1948 and Rio Tinto quickly became a ghost town. The post office, started in 1936, was discontinued in February 1948. Oddly, Rio Tinto itself does not have a GNIS entry, but the Rio Tinto post office has a GNIS entry. Some cleanup was done, and many of the old buildings were moved. Nowadays what remains are a few houses and the school (the largest building).


Notes

{{Elko County, Nevada Ghost towns in Elko County, Nevada Elko, Nevada micropolitan area Ghost towns in Nevada