Gold in desert washes

Tree!

Jr. Member
Jan 16, 2013
84
50
Inland Empire, CA
Detector(s) used
Minelab SD2200D
Primary Interest:
Prospecting
From my experience, it's best to test every layer down to bedrock.
It seems like it changes between every flood, depending on how powerfully the water was flowing.
Just run about four buckets for each foot you go down until you're at bedrock and whichever layer had the most gold is going to be the place to start. Shovel off that overburden until you get into that layer. Periodically test again since the bedrock sometimes changes depth just so you're sure you're not throwing any good gold out!

Hope you use a vac and a metal detector in conjunction with your mining!
 

Justbent

Full Member
Mar 23, 2013
241
153
North Phoenix
Detector(s) used
Whites MXT Pro
Primary Interest:
Other
I think they call that "flood gold".
If the wash has gold in it, most should be on bedrock....I would think.
 

Hard Prospector

Hero Member
Aug 29, 2012
974
1,386
SO CAL
Detector(s) used
SDC2300, Gold Monster, Sierra Gold Trac, GB2, the Falcon......and just as many drywashers
Primary Interest:
Prospecting
Do you guys consider desert washes good for drywashing or prefer to work alluvial fans, residual placer bleed off, ancient tertiary material etc. Although I have a lot of experience nugget shooting in the desert, I'm adding in drywashing. I feel the best way to fast track any learning curve is to respectfully ask questions to those who already know the program well.....Thanks
 

roadrunner

Bronze Member
Jan 28, 2012
1,230
520
Pinal Mountains,Arizona
Detector(s) used
Garrett Groundhog-2012-1st MD.
White's Goldmaster V/Sat-2nd-MD-2013
Tesoro Lobo-2015-3rd
Primary Interest:
Prospecting
Most of our gold in our washes in Az are in the top 6 inches. We dont get that much water to move it down deeper.
Or it is behind rocks, boulders, tress, roots ect in the top 3 inches.
If it goes down it will hit cemented gravels or caliche and wont even make it down the 16 feet or more to bedrock.
Could be down as far as 1600 feet,the true bedrock.
 

rodoconnor

Bronze Member
Mar 4, 2012
1,419
1,638
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
Mustang,H/P read Jim Straight's books. A real" fast track". Read them 2 or 3 times.
 

Hard Prospector

Hero Member
Aug 29, 2012
974
1,386
SO CAL
Detector(s) used
SDC2300, Gold Monster, Sierra Gold Trac, GB2, the Falcon......and just as many drywashers
Primary Interest:
Prospecting
I have several of Jim's books, great stuff.
 

roadrunner

Bronze Member
Jan 28, 2012
1,230
520
Pinal Mountains,Arizona
Detector(s) used
Garrett Groundhog-2012-1st MD.
White's Goldmaster V/Sat-2nd-MD-2013
Tesoro Lobo-2015-3rd
Primary Interest:
Prospecting
I have 2 books so far from Jim Straight.

Follow the Drywashers.
Advanced Prospecting & Detecting for Hardrock Gold.

I would recomend his books to any one.
 

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AzViper

Bronze Member
Sep 30, 2012
2,038
2,250
Arizona - Is there any other state worth visiting
Detector(s) used
Fisher Gold Bug Pro, Nokta FORS Gold, Garrett ATX, Sun Ray Gold Pro Headphones, Royal Pick, Etc.
Primary Interest:
Prospecting
I have 2 books so far from Jim Straight.

Follow the Drywashers.
Advanced Prospecting & Detecting for Hardrock Gold.

I would recomend his books to any one.

Just looked on eBay and picked up a copy of JM's Follow The Drywashers... Got it for $12.00

JM1.png JM2.png
 

roadrunner

Bronze Member
Jan 28, 2012
1,230
520
Pinal Mountains,Arizona
Detector(s) used
Garrett Groundhog-2012-1st MD.
White's Goldmaster V/Sat-2nd-MD-2013
Tesoro Lobo-2015-3rd
Primary Interest:
Prospecting
ay to go. I picked mine up there also.
$18, free shipping. Volume 3, 6th edition.
Mines signed also. Wonder if he signed all his books.
Mine does not have the insert.
 

AzViper

Bronze Member
Sep 30, 2012
2,038
2,250
Arizona - Is there any other state worth visiting
Detector(s) used
Fisher Gold Bug Pro, Nokta FORS Gold, Garrett ATX, Sun Ray Gold Pro Headphones, Royal Pick, Etc.
Primary Interest:
Prospecting
ay to go. I picked mine up there also.
$18, free shipping. Volume 3, 6th edition.
Mines signed also. Wonder if he signed all his books.
Mine does not have the insert.

Picked up a few more Jim Straight books last night. Both for $15.00.

JS2.jpg
 

roadrunner

Bronze Member
Jan 28, 2012
1,230
520
Pinal Mountains,Arizona
Detector(s) used
Garrett Groundhog-2012-1st MD.
White's Goldmaster V/Sat-2nd-MD-2013
Tesoro Lobo-2015-3rd
Primary Interest:
Prospecting
Have the one on the right also.
Not the left, have to go to ebay and see if I can get one for cheap.
Well, I know I can because I will bid snipe it if I have to.
 

hvacker

Bronze Member
Aug 18, 2012
2,357
1,904
New Mexico USA
Detector(s) used
My Head
Primary Interest:
Other
Have the one on the right also.
Not the left, have to go to ebay and see if I can get one for cheap.
Well, I know I can because I will bid snipe it if I have to.

A well learned lesson. If it has value, pay for it. Sometimes you only cheat yourself.
 

hvacker

Bronze Member
Aug 18, 2012
2,357
1,904
New Mexico USA
Detector(s) used
My Head
Primary Interest:
Other
Have the one on the right also.
Not the left, have to go to ebay and see if I can get one for cheap.
Well, I know I can because I will bid snipe it if I have to.

A well learned lesson. If it has value, pay for it. Sometimes you only cheat yourself.
 

augoldminer

Sr. Member
Jan 7, 2013
328
324
high desert goldfields
Detector(s) used
gold master V-sat
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
What most gold hunters do not understand is what is desert now may not have been desert 5000 years ago and 13,000 years ago may have been forest. or under water.

the Pleistocene Lake Lahontan, in Nevada covered a large area.
GECSC: Paleoclimate Variability of the American Southwest

Most of the gold in the southwest predates the last ice age. 3,000,000 years.

What is dry valleys now may have been lakes with beach deposits.
 

roadrunner

Bronze Member
Jan 28, 2012
1,230
520
Pinal Mountains,Arizona
Detector(s) used
Garrett Groundhog-2012-1st MD.
White's Goldmaster V/Sat-2nd-MD-2013
Tesoro Lobo-2015-3rd
Primary Interest:
Prospecting
How would we find out what areas used to be old rivers or drainage.
 

kazcoro

Hero Member
Feb 11, 2013
876
357
Glendale
Detector(s) used
Gold Bug Pro, Gold Buddy drywasher, Black Magic, Pro Gold recirc, Custom highbanker/2.5" dredge, Roadrunner Member
Primary Interest:
Prospecting
I would think the place to be would be where the ancient runoff rivers ran into the ancient lakes? I am just like you Roadrunner, I was looking for the AZ map.
 

roadrunner

Bronze Member
Jan 28, 2012
1,230
520
Pinal Mountains,Arizona
Detector(s) used
Garrett Groundhog-2012-1st MD.
White's Goldmaster V/Sat-2nd-MD-2013
Tesoro Lobo-2015-3rd
Primary Interest:
Prospecting
Thats what i was looking for.
As an example, when hwy 60 goes across the road at Florence junction, you have 79 that runs south. But,all the hills and mountains from Gonzales pass, the runoff heads towards hwy 79.
That area is now the Nat Quard firing range,state land,blm,ect.
Now I would think that that area would make a perfect lake bead, or low area for all the water from that mountain range to collect.
There are some and where a few claims in that area also.
I am thinking about hitting that area, but I need to look at a topo or something as where to start.
I am going to get the book fistfulls of gold to start with this week.
 

Clay Diggins

Silver Member
Nov 14, 2010
4,885
14,258
The Great Southwest
Primary Interest:
Prospecting
The geology of the Western US was created primarily in the Laramide Orogony from 80 million to 35 million years ago. Although not exclusively the origin of today's gold deposits it is the origin of most. The desert Southwest presents very few opportunities to explore intact gold bearing water deposit features.

The basin and range of Southern California, Nevada and Arizona has many placer gold deposits but I've only found one in my 40+ years of prospecting that was related to an ancient river system. This deposit consists of late tertiary cemented river gravels stranded in two small remaining deposits high on the south side of the Black Range in central Arizona. Good gold was found there. I have discovered another on the upper Pecos drainage in New Mexico but there is no evidence of gold in that conglomerate.

I'm sure there are more somewhere in the Basin and Range Province but my point is alluvial deposits, such as the tertiary gravels of the California Sierra Nevada, are not a significant source of placer gold in the desert Southwest in my experience.

We have mapped the Tertiary gold bearing gravels of the Sierra. When studying these deposits it quickly becomes evident that the ancient locations of these rivers have very little relationship to where their gravels are found today. Trying to puzzle out the where the gravels from an ancient water feature would be found today is truly an exercise in futility. Earth stuff moves in mysterious ways over millions of years.

When looking for gold bearing water influenced features in the desert Southwest you will have much more success studying the detrital semi alluvial fans so present in the southwestern deserts. Often the detrital clasts are mistaken for river gravels. These are the source of much of the placer gold concentrations to be found in this arid environment. A wise prospector would study in place deposition and deflation concentrations as well. These latter deposits tend to be small but very rich. Perfect for the small scale prospector/miner.

To answer the original question - it depends. Seldom are the best concentrations found on bedrock. In most of the detrital pediment deposits in the desert it would be very unlikely to find gold on bedrock even if you could dig that far down. Where gold is found on bedrock metal detectors and vacuums become the tools of choice. Sorry there is not a more definitive answer but, in the end, the fact is gold is where you find it.
 

elgatodelnoche

Sr. Member
Aug 21, 2013
333
119
East Mesa, Arizona
Detector(s) used
Garrett Deepseeker ADS
Primary Interest:
Prospecting
I shovel down to bedrock and don't fool with flood gold. It has been non existent in areas I work with dry washers in the Picketpost Mountain, Goldfield Mountains, and Superstition Mountain areas. When a gusher comes along, everything gets classified right quickly. Once on bedrock I will hammer and chisel it mercilessly to get into all the cracks. I really need to make another blower vac as they are the handiest piece of kit I have ever seen.
 

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