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Bisbee High School

1957 establishments in ArizonaBisbee, ArizonaPublic high schools in ArizonaSchools in Cochise County, Arizona
BISBEE HIGH SCHOOL
BISBEE HIGH SCHOOL

Bisbee High School is a high school in Bisbee, Arizona. It is part of the Bisbee Unified School District, which also operates an elementary school and a junior high school. The high school runs on a four-day school week.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Bisbee High School (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Bisbee High School
School Terrace Road,

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 31.414752 ° E -109.888264 °
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Address

Bisbee High School

School Terrace Road 325
85603
Arizona, United States
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Phone number
Bisbee Unified School District

call+15204325714

Website
busd.k12.az.us

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BISBEE HIGH SCHOOL
BISBEE HIGH SCHOOL
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Nearby Places

Lavender Pit
Lavender Pit

The Lavender Pit is a former open pit copper mine near Bisbee in Cochise County, Arizona, United States. It is located near the famous Copper Queen Mine. The Lavender Pit was named in honor of Harrison M. Lavender (1890–1952), who as Vice-President and General Manager of Phelps Dodge Corporation, conceived and carried out this plan for making the previously unprofitable low-grade copper bearing rock of the area into commercial copper ore. Phelps Dodge Corporation opened the Lavender Pit in 1950, at the site of the earlier, higher-grade Sacramento Hill mine. Production through 1974 totaled 86 million tons of ore averaging about 0.7% copper, or about 600,000 tons of copper produced, with gold and silver as byproducts. About 256 million tons of waste were stripped, but a portion of this was acid-leached for additional copper. Turquoise was also a by-product of this mining activity. Bisbee turquoise, also known as Bisbee Blue, is amongst the finest turquoise found anywhere in the world. Mining operations in the pit ended in 1974. The undeveloped Cochise deposit, located immediately north of the Lavender pit, contains an estimated 190 million tons of rock containing 0.4% acid-soluble copper, which may be mined in the future. Because of the competent host rock, this pit has much steeper sides than other open pit copper mines in the southwest area. The pit covers an area of 300 acres (1.2 km²), and is 900 feet (274 m) deep. Large tonnages of dump rock are placed around Bisbee, notably north of the residential district of Warren and other parts of the southeastern Mule Mountains area.