GoldReport
New member
Hello all! I was very excited to find this forum, there is an amazing amount of information on this site.
A little about me, I've got my bachelor's in Mining engineering and have about 10 years in the mining industry in underground salt, open pit hard rock quarries, now I work a travel job and cover about 40 sites that mine aggregates in one form or another across the USA.
I've been a rock n dirt nerd as long as I can remember: digging holes, finding rocks, crushing rocks, licking rocks... In the last year or so I've started prospecting for gold which is quite fun. Along side panning in rivers I've also panned some decent gold from sand and gravel pits, it's all about who you know.
More recently I came across a report that indicated gold in a lode deposit, but it was small and not too significant at the time. I've been searching for this deposit in my free time (whats that??) and have a couple of samples that might be worth something. The report, from the 1860s, said that it is associated with pyrite, iron sulfide. It didn't indicated if it was mill gold or bound up chemically. What I've done so far is crush my samples, pan them, and then roasted followed by panning again. No luck so far.
Any questions I have right now could probably be answered by continuing to research on this site, I'm just excited to be here and wanted to say hello!
P.S. I firmly believe I won't find anything worth a great deal of money but it's more of a hobby and would be incredible to me to find (even a little) gold in a state where there's never been a commercial gold mine.
A little about me, I've got my bachelor's in Mining engineering and have about 10 years in the mining industry in underground salt, open pit hard rock quarries, now I work a travel job and cover about 40 sites that mine aggregates in one form or another across the USA.
I've been a rock n dirt nerd as long as I can remember: digging holes, finding rocks, crushing rocks, licking rocks... In the last year or so I've started prospecting for gold which is quite fun. Along side panning in rivers I've also panned some decent gold from sand and gravel pits, it's all about who you know.
More recently I came across a report that indicated gold in a lode deposit, but it was small and not too significant at the time. I've been searching for this deposit in my free time (whats that??) and have a couple of samples that might be worth something. The report, from the 1860s, said that it is associated with pyrite, iron sulfide. It didn't indicated if it was mill gold or bound up chemically. What I've done so far is crush my samples, pan them, and then roasted followed by panning again. No luck so far.
Any questions I have right now could probably be answered by continuing to research on this site, I'm just excited to be here and wanted to say hello!
P.S. I firmly believe I won't find anything worth a great deal of money but it's more of a hobby and would be incredible to me to find (even a little) gold in a state where there's never been a commercial gold mine.