🔎 UNIDENTIFIED Alluvial Gold?

Jackstraw20

Jr. Member
Jan 25, 2021
42
78
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
A friend sent me a photo of what he says is alluvial gold he has found in ancient riverbeds in Colorado over the years. Can anyone verify if he is correct and this is truly "alluvial gold."
Thanks very much!
20220512_095826.jpg
 

Attachments

  • 20220512_044243.jpg
    20220512_044243.jpg
    2.4 MB · Views: 347
  • 20220512_043225.jpg
    20220512_043225.jpg
    3.4 MB · Views: 139
  • 20220512_042750.jpg
    20220512_042750.jpg
    1.8 MB · Views: 127
  • 20220512_095546.jpg
    20220512_095546.jpg
    2.8 MB · Views: 113
OP
OP
Jackstraw20

Jackstraw20

Jr. Member
Jan 25, 2021
42
78
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
A friend sent me a photo of what he says is alluvial gold he has found in ancient riverbeds in Colorado over the years. Can anyone verify if he is correct and this is truly "alluvial gold."
Thanks very much!
View attachment 2027130
I Soaked them all in Sulphuric Acid for 6 days and they didn't lose any color, I also boiled them and they conglomerated together in a soft malleable solid piece. I have also taken a few flakes, added some borax, and hit it with some map gas in a crucible. Gold was definitely seen under a microscope after I had created a "button" to the naked eye it looked more silver, but there was noticeable gold in the after product. Plus, I have used sulphuric acid many times and it eats away just about everything other than high grade gold ores. These all seem promising to me?

Any feedback is greatly appreciated

Thanks, John
 

Upvote 0
OP
OP
Jackstraw20

Jackstraw20

Jr. Member
Jan 25, 2021
42
78
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
I've lived in CO all my life and spent a good amount of time looking for gold and I don't see any gold in the pics. Like others have said, take a piece and pummel it into dust and pan it. He clearly has three gold pans to put to use. It will all wash away except the heavy's which will include black sand. The gold will shine like no tomorrow in the black sand and against the green pan. Pyrite will kind of look like gold but when you shade it, it no longer shines. Plus, it will more than likely wash away with the light material, and, it flakes apart. Gold will shine in the sun or shaded with your hand. It's unmistakable once you know.
20220406_115954.jpg

I have also lived in CO a long time. I have found many telluride, quartz rocks with high gold content, ancient ingots that test at the 19 karat mark (what many say is the strength ofwhat they use to make ancient gold products) Anyway I have so many samples, legally procured either on private land I was given access to or acceptable places in the wilderness.

I now have about 2 tons of high grade ore and the alluvial gold weight I own is around 800 grams. (I know it's not 100% gold but after my tests with sulphuric acid I am pretty sure they are well above 75%-80%. I don't have a suitable area for a lab to try certain extraction methods. If anyone has any advice or could point me in the right direction, or would even be interested in partnering up to refine this gold, I am open to the idea if you have knowledge, procedures, and equipment, to back up your expertise.

I really have a lot of gold, platinum, palladium, silver, & copper, etc. I just don't know what to do next. Send me a private message and I am happy to send you emails with hi res microscopic photos of my ore, telluride, and other samples.

Cheers everyone,

John
 

Attachments

  • 20220406_115029.jpg
    20220406_115029.jpg
    1.2 MB · Views: 37
  • 20220406_114303.jpg
    20220406_114303.jpg
    3.2 MB · Views: 36
  • 20220406_114118.jpg
    20220406_114118.jpg
    2.3 MB · Views: 34
  • 20220406_114009.jpg
    20220406_114009.jpg
    2.4 MB · Views: 33
  • 20220406_115055.jpg
    20220406_115055.jpg
    1.8 MB · Views: 32
  • 20220406_115519.jpg
    20220406_115519.jpg
    924.2 KB · Views: 33
  • 20220406_121510.jpg
    20220406_121510.jpg
    2.7 MB · Views: 38
  • 20220406_120047.jpg
    20220406_120047.jpg
    469.7 KB · Views: 33
  • 20220406_121526.jpg
    20220406_121526.jpg
    2.4 MB · Views: 34
  • 20220406_113835.jpg
    20220406_113835.jpg
    2.9 MB · Views: 36
Upvote 0
OP
OP
Jackstraw20

Jackstraw20

Jr. Member
Jan 25, 2021
42
78
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
I will tell you what I would do. Take a hammer and hit some of the bigger chunks, especially the ones with cracks, and see if the shatter and break into buts and dust or if they are malleable.
Quite malleable actually. I simmered about 30 grams of it and it became one extremely malleable clump.

Any info on what that means?
My gold detector also makes the definitive "gold" sound when I place it above it. It is a Bounty Hunter Quick Draw 2 I believe.
 

Upvote 0

traveller777

Gold Member
Aug 20, 2017
5,435
17,432
East Tennessee
Detector(s) used
Minelab CTX 3030 & Explorer
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
Quite malleable actually. I simmered about 30 grams of it and it became one extremely malleable clump.

Any info on what that means?
My gold detector also makes the definitive "gold" sound when I place it above it. It is a Bounty Hunter Quick Draw 2 I believe.
What do you mean by "simmer"? What is that.

There are some real super experienced gold miners and gold experts on here. I have detected and found nuggets and I know gold. But I would have thought by now the experienced gold people would have told you something.
 

Upvote 0
OP
OP
Jackstraw20

Jackstraw20

Jr. Member
Jan 25, 2021
42
78
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
What do you mean by "simmer"? What is that.

There are some real super experienced gold miners and gold experts on here. I have detected and found nuggets and I know gold. But I would have thought by now the experienced gold people would have told you something.
By simmering I mean I brought them to an almost boil in water. I have an electric kiln and am waiting for a new piece that goes inside and heats the gold and I am going to mortar & pestle a few grams, add a little borax, then heat the gold up to melting point and pour into a square ingot crucible. Seems like an okay idea right?
 

Upvote 0
OP
OP
Jackstraw20

Jackstraw20

Jr. Member
Jan 25, 2021
42
78
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
Not sure what a boil in water does for you. Melting point of gold in over 1900F
Yeah, my electric kiln goes up to that temp, the boiling was just an experiment to see if the samples stayed hard or became malleable under "slight heat."
 

Upvote 0

Top Member Reactions

Users who are viewing this thread

Top