Ore?

Dray01

Jr. Member
Oct 23, 2020
38
31
Gold Canyon, AZ
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
C6AC1049-1AFD-46B6-A31C-F44CDB632709.jpeg 597AE40F-47F8-488B-BFC2-DAC87B7A8F1F.jpeg 84C0D0B6-3B93-47BE-83D3-1DD5A57BADAF.jpeg 51D84F34-F641-49F6-BE5C-B68C8C112EFF.jpeg 2D2FD2E0-52F3-466B-8CFA-8BD9E475771B.jpeg Would this be some type of ore? Found in Pinal County, AZ. TIA.....
 

Last edited:

ToddsPoint

Gold Member
Mar 2, 2018
5,201
12,143
Todds Point, IL
Primary Interest:
Metal Detecting
No idea, but I do know people from AZ post some of the wildest looking rocks on the forum. Our IL rocks are sure boring compared to yours. Gary
 

Upvote 0

Steve1236

Hero Member
Sep 14, 2017
702
971
Az
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
Looks like it, I see limonite, quartz, hematite, either malachite or chrysocolla, I think I see some pyrite, it's a cool specimen, if there's more where you found that you should crush some of it and pan it out and see if there's any gold in there, a lot of golds best friends are there in that ore specimen, ya never know.
 

Upvote 0

RTR

Gold Member
Nov 21, 2017
8,180
32,468
Smith Mt. Lake Va.
Detector(s) used
Teknetics Liberator
Falcon MD-20
***********
Blue Bowl
Angus MacKirk sluice
Miller Table
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
Looks good. I'd crush it,classify it, and pan it , only takes a few minutes w/a 6 pound hammer to turn it into sand :) 012.JPG 011.JPG
 

Upvote 0
OP
OP
D

Dray01

Jr. Member
Oct 23, 2020
38
31
Gold Canyon, AZ
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
I was told something about heating ����*♀️ I like the crush and pan idea!
 

Upvote 0

Top Member Reactions

Users who are viewing this thread

Top