Richard36
Well-known member
Thanks for the reply butcher.
Those silvery gray crystals are well worth having assayed. They might only be a variety of iron pyrite, but not likely, but even if they are, they will most likely contain some amount of gold and silver. What you are describing sounds alot like Sylvanite, (AgAuTe4 ) a silver gold telluride. The other possibilities are Argentite-Acanthite, ( Ag2S ) a silver sulfide, Glaucodot (Co, Fe)***, a cobalt iron arsenic sulfide, Skutterudite, (CoAs2-3) a cobalt arsenide. If it contains Cobalt, that is a strategic metal, and is worth looking into. If it contains enough to cause nitric acid to turn pink, you have a high grade cobalt ore, and is definitely worth mining. If it turns sulfuric acid red, it contains tellurium, and is worth mining for the its tellurium content as well as the gold and silver that it would contain.
I am familiar with southern Oregon, and the Chetco is prime dredging ground. Too bad most of the gold is in the wilderness area, Though most of the drainage in that area does contain placer gold. All mineralized rock in that area should be well scrutinized. Just because you can not see the gold does not mean it is not there. Mineralized rock from that region will more often than not contain invisible micron gold bound up in solid solution within the sulfides, and or oxide minerals found there. Another point of interest is chrome ridge. It gets its name from its Chromite content, and is the largest Chromium deposit in the U.S. Uvarovite garnet, Chrome diopside, and Alexandrite can be found there as well.
Thanks for the post. I hope to hear back from you, and good luck.
I look forward to reading and responding to further posts from you and others soon.
Sincerely; Rick.
Those silvery gray crystals are well worth having assayed. They might only be a variety of iron pyrite, but not likely, but even if they are, they will most likely contain some amount of gold and silver. What you are describing sounds alot like Sylvanite, (AgAuTe4 ) a silver gold telluride. The other possibilities are Argentite-Acanthite, ( Ag2S ) a silver sulfide, Glaucodot (Co, Fe)***, a cobalt iron arsenic sulfide, Skutterudite, (CoAs2-3) a cobalt arsenide. If it contains Cobalt, that is a strategic metal, and is worth looking into. If it contains enough to cause nitric acid to turn pink, you have a high grade cobalt ore, and is definitely worth mining. If it turns sulfuric acid red, it contains tellurium, and is worth mining for the its tellurium content as well as the gold and silver that it would contain.
I am familiar with southern Oregon, and the Chetco is prime dredging ground. Too bad most of the gold is in the wilderness area, Though most of the drainage in that area does contain placer gold. All mineralized rock in that area should be well scrutinized. Just because you can not see the gold does not mean it is not there. Mineralized rock from that region will more often than not contain invisible micron gold bound up in solid solution within the sulfides, and or oxide minerals found there. Another point of interest is chrome ridge. It gets its name from its Chromite content, and is the largest Chromium deposit in the U.S. Uvarovite garnet, Chrome diopside, and Alexandrite can be found there as well.
Thanks for the post. I hope to hear back from you, and good luck.
I look forward to reading and responding to further posts from you and others soon.
Sincerely; Rick.