A mini gold rush has descended on Northern California

DeepseekerADS

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A mini gold rush has descended on Northern California - SFGate

By Michelle Robertson, SFGATE Updated 12:16 pm, Friday, July 21, 2017

When asking seasoned miners about this year’s so-called gold rush in Northern California, it can be a challenge to obtain trustworthy information.

“People who are smart don’t advertise what they’ve found,” said Bob Van Camp, better known as “Digger Bob.” “If you’re finding nuggets in an area, you don’t tell anyone about it; I’ve made that mistake before.”

After all, if you’re a professional miner looking to make your fortune, it’s the nuggets you’re after. Flakes and dust are milquetoast – and altogether worthless – compared to heavy chunks of the shiny yellow stuff.

Northern California was pelted with record rainfall this winter, and miners predicted that once all the water washed away, gold would be left in its wake. It appears that their predictions are panning out.

“Folks are finding more gold — ‘flood gold’ — than usual this year,” said Diana Clayton, president of the Shasta Miners & Prospectors Association, which owns seven claims throughout Northern California and boasts about 350 members.

“Many of our members have been mining for decades,” Clayton said. “They really know the area. And they know there’s been changes.

Bryant Shock, co-owner of Gold Prospecting Adventures in Jamestown, Calif., estimates that there’s been a quarter increase in professional miners heading up north – a sure sign of a legitimate gold rush, he says.

So too, Shock has seen bigger chunks of the mineral unearthed this season than in recent years, and not just near streams and rivers. Heavy rainfall triggers slides, he explained, which create cutouts in the hills and deposit small bits of gold in gulches and ravines.

“I’ve heard of people walking along, kicking the dirt and finding a piece of gold,” Clayton added. She said a Shasta Miner recently uncovered a nugget half the size of her pinkie finger – that’s a biggie.

Clayton wasn’t about to let SFGATE in on the location of the prized chunk – “That’s like asking fishermen where they found their best catch!” – but she did mention the prospects surrounding the Oroville Dam, where miners believe gold is buried in the bedrock and dirt washed away when the spillway

“There’s good gold in that gravel,” said professional miner Mike Abernathy definitively.

Aspiring miners should take pause before heading to Oroville with a pan in their hand and visions of riches on their minds. The region surrounding the spillway is completely inaccessible to the public, and the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) vehemently refutes the treasure hunters’ chatter.

“The river channels affected by the flooding were extensively mined during the late 19th and 20th centuries, and having high flood waters would not expose additional gold,” a BLM spokesperson told SFGATE over email.

Nonetheless, a miner can dream — that’s what this gold hunting business is all about anyway. Odds of making a fortune in the goldfields of California are slim-to-none, but that’s not really the point.

Said Clayton, “It’s about having fun and maybe getting lucky.”
 

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dave wiseman

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Jul 23, 2004
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All hype...every time there'a a storm these prospecting shops and clubs contact the local media and promote nonsense.Occasionaly somerone will find a decent size clunker or even a huge piece,that's few and far between.First off there's limited access to most motherlode creeks and rivers.Secondly,unless one of these waterways cuts through a tertiary river all your likely to find is flood gold or a once in awhile matchead size piece.The local creeks and rivers are so clogged up with native and non native overgrowth that what little gold is left dosen't have a chance to move like the old days.Just my two peso's.
 

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DeepseekerADS

DeepseekerADS

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What this article will do is send tons of newbies into the wild tearing up the countryside.
 

Goldwasher

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Yea stay in the city...the small seasonal creeks only have occasional tiny pieces of gold...don't even bother ;)
 

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Goldwasher

Gold Member
May 26, 2009
6,077
13,225
Sailor Flat, Ca.
🥇 Banner finds
1
Detector(s) used
SDC2300, Gold Bug 2 Burlap, fish oil, .35 gallons of water per minute.
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
Me too. Though the river has been on hold as far as access to "new" areas. Lots of rain...snowpack then initial melt fast water. After that the "normal" melt high water. The small creeks have had a lot of material moved and accessible for months. If you know what has been worked already or what was deep and now is stripped or shallow you are out in front. The pictured gold is all from "under" erosion..not because of it ....well, in recent times that is..... every piece within eye site or earshot of the other. Not from a large area.

Just the plus 10 mesh BTW
 

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