Posted on 01/14/2014 9:12:22 PM PST by Jet Jaguar
Ok. But how?
Take a leaf and dip it in mercury. Then burn the mercury away. If there is anything shiny, you’re good.
My best guess.
Unless you breathe the mercury fumes and then all the gold in the world won’t repair you.
Could a metal detector be fine tuned enough to pick up a threshold of gold in a plant?
The two I own could not.
Could we use one of those “curly” light bulbs to prospect the leaves?
My guess is that a Mass Spectrometer would come in handy for this task. (Or perhaps a tricorder.)
Half the gold ever mined comes from one large asteroid strike in South Africa billions of years ago. Gold is much more abundant in the Solar System than it is on the surface of the Earth. Most of it has been dragged toward the Earth’s core by molten iron.
Buy my Gold Detection Kit for $14.95 and you’ll know where the gold is. (Plus S&H)
But it never caught on as a prospecting method
Plant associations with the mineral suite of the deposits associated with precious metals was used by savvy prospectors in the old west, and I'm sure elsewhere. Some of them actively accumulate some of the metals for enhanced disease and herbivore resistance and others are just tolerant of them to capitalize on water associated with the exposures structural trends...
No way. There’s a tree, IIRC, in S. Africa that picks up nickel in large amounts, maybe with that, but it couldn’t be in a compound, it would have to be metallic.
Gold is where you find it.
That’s an old timer joke, and at the same time true. It seems to always end up being found where it “can’t occur”. I saw a youtube video recently where the author bought a sack of sand at Home Depot and panned gold out of it. The Fort Knox mine was like that, a granite hosted gold (in quartz stringers) IIRC. The author of a book I have on prospecting sold the claim that had the strike for a pittance, The area had produced about 8 million ounces of placer, but no one could noodle out the source, and it was right under many peoples nose in the local granite hillocks. The guy who bought his claim didn’t know any better and cleaved off the covering growth of one after putzing around for a while. I think he made something like a half billion on that hit...
I just put a handful of leaves from a bush out in the back yard and dropped them in my gold pan. They all washed out. No gold I guess.
I would think that the soil under an old deep-rooted deciduous tree would be rich in gold micro-particles. Probably not enough concentration to register with a standard detector.
Geologic uniformitarians tell us it takes 4.5 billion years for placer gold deposits to accumulate in our streams. But here in Georgia we find fresh gold after every major rain. There is even cases of gold forming on underground mining timbers in Australia. It is true that “gold is where you find it” unless your prospecting partner is wearing gold repellant!
It obviously makes sense that the interior of the earth would be heated by radioactivity, and we know that the interior is molten lava, down to some point. The core would be molten iron, yes - but also all other metals, including gold, silver, and platinum, in various quantities. It would seem inevitable that theres more molten gold at the core than there is solid gold accessible from the surface.
But since Al Gore, expert that he is, informs us that the temperature down there is millions of degrees, I guess theres no way well ever see and touch it.
Are you frickin kidding me?
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