See a mine the way the miners of yesteryear saw them. With help from a headlamp, hardhat, and tour guide, visitors too can walk the rails inside the mine at Lake Vermilion- Soudan Underground Mine State Park in northeastern Minnesota.
“Our new tours provide an opportunity to walk the drift and to see how the rock formations and exploratory work done by miners, using specific tools, allowed them to determine the location of the iron ore deposit,” explained park manager Jim Essig.
Those who take the tour will also get to see a Minnesota fault line. Yes, Minnesota has them and yes, they are now viewable during the new weekday-only tour at the Soudan Underground Mine.
The new “walking drift tour” will occur at 2 p.m. weekdays in September at the mine. Visitors will descend a half mile into the mine via a “cage” elevator, followed by a three-quarter mile walk in search of geologic clues that show the way to iron ore. Visitors should wear sturdy shoes and a sweater.
Once visitors are underground, the hunt commences for geologic clues on the three-quarter-mile walk formerly taken by miners. It takes about two hours and costs $20.
At the tour’s end, a train will transport visitors to the beginning of their journey. Until now, only geologists and students of geology studied the underground rock formations at the Soudan Underground Mine.
Visitors will resurface with a new understanding of and appreciation for the men who mined the ore, and how they did it. Reservations are not required, and individuals must be 10 years of age and older.
The walking tours end for the season on Sept. 28. The other tours, which take visitors through the mine in rail cars, are offered daily Memorial Day weekend through the end of September, and weekends in October through the annual Education Minnesota conference (with group tours available year-round by arrangement).
Other recently completed amenities at the park include hiking trails, a public water access in Cable Bay, and a new segment of the paved Mesabi Trail that connects the park to the nearby town of Tower. Another highlight of the park is the Armstrong Bay Day-Use Area, completed in 2013, which includes boat dockage, a fishing pier and a picnic area.
For more information, call the park at 218-300- 7000.
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