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The Auditor Statues
Multiple monuments to a grizzled old mutt that survived the landscape of Butte's treacherous Berkeley Pit.
You may have heard about the microorganisms that have adapted to the toxic water of the Berkeley Pit, but there’s another, larger creature that has become something of a local legend.
During his life from around 1986 to 2003, the ghostly dog-bigfoot hybrid (or Puli if you want to get technical about the breed) lived alone in the Berkeley Pit. Miners called him “the Auditor” because he had a habit of showing up when he was least expected. The Auditor was not friendly to people, so mine workers built him a doghouse and would leave food. As he started to show his old age, workers began putting baby aspirin in the food. Photos of the Auditor were displayed alongside ore samples and awards in a case in the mine’s office.
While the Auditor was still alive, Holly Peterson, an environmental engineer from Montana Tech, clipped a sample of his fur and found elevated levels of arsenic and other toxic elements, lending to the mythology of Butte Tough: an old mining town that survives among its ghosts.
Today, several monuments have been erected around Butte to honor the memory of the tough old dog. They can be found outside the Butte-Silver Bow Public Archives and the Chamber of Commerce
Know Before You Go
One monument greets visitors at the door to the Butte-Silver Bow Public Archives (17 W Quartz St, Butte, MT, 59701).
A second monument lives outside the Butte-Silver Bow Chamber of Commerce (1000 George St, Butte, MT 59701).
And sightings of a third monument suggest the Auditor wanders Butte's commercial spaces. Check the inside of the Butte-Silver Bow Chamber of Commerce or stop by the Butte Plaza Mall (3100 Harrison Ave, Butte, MT 59701) for a glimpse at this legendary beast of Butte.
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