Found 6 Pieces Of Gold

nuggeteer

Jr. Member
Joined
Jun 7, 2013
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Location
Redding, CA
Detector(s) used
Gold Bug Pro
Primary Interest:
Other
Hi everyone,
Headed out on my bike this week to four areas with good auriferous geology and many indications of mining. Lately, I've been spending time taking notes and making maps of all the information I'm gathering from various libraries and county departments. Having worked in both a library and bookstore I'm aware of the increasing popularity of e-readers, but there is a lot in old dusty books that will never be digitized or found on the internet.
Anyway, the first area was one of ground sluicings which I had detected before. I hiked up a bank of yellow metavolcanic bedrock that had scatters of red stained quartz and dark iron rich cobbles; the sort of scene where gold might make an appearance. It was also the scene of a pile of old junk which, of course, had been shot full of holes. I drifted over to the tailings, checking the troughs and slopes. A wide but shallow wash meandered down from a bank, and I focused my efforts there. Everything that ran off that bank came down to this wash and it was only two inches deep. Beneath the dust was a stretch of jagged bedrock to catch the heavy stuff. Unfortunately, it wasn't long before I realized that the only heavy stuff it caught was lead birdshot, and I got plenty. Toward the end of the day, I got tired of all the junk and moved up to the head of the wash which looked to be less affected by human activity. Within a few minutes, I had two small pieces of gold.
The second area was below steep hillsides that were mined in the late 1850's for gold-bearing quartz. I found this spot by following a ditch the old miners dug to bring water to their sluices. There was an escarpment above the ditches where the miners left off, and strips between the cuts that weren't sluiced. I detected these areas, but the gold must've been too deep or lacking thereof because I didn't find anything.
The third area was alongside a seasonal creek that had placers worked in the early 1850's. There were also several small claims along it as recently as the 1990's. A bald eagle was circling overhead when I arrived. The area looked really good, but much of it was situated under an old dump and after about an hour of my detector screaming at me I gave up. The bulk of the trash looked to be from the 1950's and I might go back just to dig through the heaps.
The fourth area was one I visited several months ago; before fully understanding how to use this detector. It was completely without trash as I had cleaned it thoroughly by digging up every single target. I remember my pockets being so full of rusted metal that the coil would pick up on it whenever I knelt down. The area was down slope from a large earthen dam and dry reservoir likely constructed for the operation of "booming." The ground sluicings were extensive but covered by manzanita to such a point that only a small portion was open to detecting. As I swung away, I continuously kicked off the veneer of pine needles and rounded cobbles to expose the clay layer beneath. In the process, I uncovered a thick line of huge red ants which immediately began ascending my legs. Luckily, only one made it above my socks to bite. Not long afterward, I began getting the signals I had missed before and at the end of the day I had four more pieces of gold, one being the largest I've ever found.

Below: the first area and the gold, the second area, the third area, the bald eagle, the fourth area and the gold, the gold

PIC_0096.webpPIC_0425.webpPIC_0363.webpPIC_0365.webpPIC_0473.webpPIC_0335.webpPIC_0429.webpPIC_0414.webp
 

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outstanding.gif
Outstanding nuggeteer. Thanks for sharing...
 

I 'll bet a multi-ounce specimen is in your future, well done.
 

BTW, the people at Fisher Research Labs would probably enjoy hearing your story and pics.
 

Nuggeteer, thanks for the stories of the nuggets, this keeps the confidence up of all us nugget hunters between finds, looks like your hunting some great ground there. Keep good records and go back thru the areas you found nuggets in when you eventually buy a PI detector, once you cash in some of that found gold!
 

nice gold. happen to see any signs of a squatch?
 

nice gold. happen to see any signs of a squatch?

Yes, jeff - don't believe his cover story of libraries and dusty books. He's really befriended a sasquatch who tells him gold locations in exchange for Big Macs!!
lol :tongue3:

Outstanding Gold, nuggeteer!
 

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BTW, the people at Fisher Research Labs would probably enjoy hearing your story and pics.

Hey Hard Prospector- Have you ever contacted them with any of your GB Pro finds?

Nuggeteer, thanks for the stories of the nuggets, this keeps the confidence up of all us nugget hunters between finds, looks like your hunting some great ground there. Keep good records and go back thru the areas you found nuggets in when you eventually buy a PI detector, once you cash in some of that found gold!

Thanks MXT SNIPER- I always like reading other people's success stories when I'm having a god-awful gold-less stretch.

nice gold. happen to see any signs of a squatch?



Yes, jeff - don't believe his cover story of libraries and dusty books. He's really befriended a sasquatch who tells him gold locations in exchange for Big Macs!!
lol :tongue3:

Outstanding Gold, nuggeteer!

For about 15 minutes, something stronger than me was ripping a tree trunk apart while I detected at the third area. Probably just a black bear, but it sure got the adrenaline going.
 

yeah 'probably', that's what the squatches count on
 

I have shared my results with the people at White's quite a bit as most of my prospecting is with the TDI and GMT
 

Nuggeteer... congratulations on those beautiful nuggets!! Lots of character!! You're sounding like an old pro and putting together some very good articles supported by terrific photos. I hope you archive them in a folder on your computer, because one day you or family members may wish to look back on these articles with a project in mind, and of course HP's suggestion is a good one. :icon_thumright:

Jim.
 

Nuggeteer,
I would like to add my congratulations to you for a job well done on finding those nuggets! Along with the congrats I will also add a Thank You for sharing with us as the sight of someone's success is also a boost to others to keep on trying!.........................63bkpkr
 

Nice work man ..That's a good days beepin !
 

""""Headed out on my bike this week to four areas with good auriferous geology and many indications of mining. Lately, I've been spending time taking notes and making maps of all the information I'm gathering from various libraries and county departments. Having worked in both a library and bookstore I'm aware of the increasing popularity of e-readers, but there is a lot in old dusty books that will never be digitized or found on the internet.""""

RESEARCH:hello2:....great finds...that pinon/juniper transition zone is a wicked environment to wander about aimlessly...
 

The wheat penny is a nice find too, but it doesn't compare with the gold!
 

sweet way to go man
 

Nice job!

I like your report, too.

My only 6 piece nugget day thus far came with sweet 'n sour sauce.

Sigh.

You are inspiring. :thumbsup:
 

Absolutely gorgeous gold, and a well written story to go with...:icon_thumleft:
 

I have shared my results with the people at White's quite a bit as most of my prospecting is with the TDI and GMT

Hard Prospector- Thanks, I'll let Fisher know. Did White's publish your results?

Nuggeteer,
I would like to add my congratulations to you for a job well done on finding those nuggets! Along with the congrats I will also add a Thank You for sharing with us as the sight of someone's success is also a boost to others to keep on trying!.........................63bkpkr

Thanks 63bkpkr- Went out again yesterday and didn't get anything... So, I'm reading other people's stories now. Getting recharged!

""""Headed out on my bike this week to four areas with good auriferous geology and many indications of mining. Lately, I've been spending time taking notes and making maps of all the information I'm gathering from various libraries and county departments. Having worked in both a library and bookstore I'm aware of the increasing popularity of e-readers, but there is a lot in old dusty books that will never be digitized or found on the internet.""""

RESEARCH:hello2:....great finds...that pinon/juniper transition zone is a wicked environment to wander about aimlessly...

secretcanyon- I just moved from Prescott last year. The Redding area has a remarkably similar terrain to central Arizona. I used to pan the creeks in the Bradshaw Mountains, and hike/bike all over Sedona and Flagstaff exploring cliff dwellings and fossiliferous locations.
 

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