The ride to the bottom takes about two minutes and visitors can see veins of gold in the rock and ride an underground tram, according to the mine’s website.
One person has been killed and a dozen rescued after a lift malfunctioned at a gold mine tourist attraction in Colorado.
It happened around noon at Mollie Kathleen Gold Mine in Cripple Creek.
Twelve people were trapped about 300m (1,000ft) down for six hours, but Colorado’s governor said on Thursday night they had been rescued.
The trapped group were already underground when the lift malfunctioned as it descended with another 11 visitors.
The incident killed one person on board, but it’s not yet been revealed how they died. Four others suffered minor injuries.
That group was able to return to the surface while the others were stuck below ground while the lift was checked.
Radio communication was established with the group of 12, which included a guide, and Teller County Sheriff Jason Mikesell said they had water, blankets and chairs.
They weren’t told someone had died, only that there was an issue with the lift, in order to keep them calm.
Firefighters were put on standby in case the problem couldn’t be fixed.
The sheriff said on Thursday night they still didn’t know what caused the problem but that engineers had checked the lift before sending it down to retrieve the group.
He declined to identify the person who died.