Boarteats
Full Member
- Joined
- Mar 25, 2018
- Messages
- 134
- Reaction score
- 137
- Golden Thread
- 0
- Location
- Near Baltimore
- Detector(s) used
- Falcon MD20
- Primary Interest:
- Prospecting
Motivation for this question is that I'm collecting rock samples for my first ever assay purchase. Ideally, I'd like to filter out low probability material.
I've had pretty good results using my Falcon MD20. When I receive a false positive, finding the culprit is typically pretty straightforward. ...at least up to now.
I'm currently exploring an area with highly mineralized sedimentary rocks like the ones in the very short video link. Lots of iron oxide. The samples seen in video were roasted. These rocks often elicit what I believe is a positive response from my Falcon MD20 (see link to short video). However, I don't yet understand why. Crushing and panning samples often times doesn't reveal any identifiable gold or anything else that explains my detector's response.
So, couple questions for those of you with much more knowledge and experience than I.
1. In the linked-to video, I scan an exemplar rock sample with an MD20. I believe that the detector is providing a positive response indicating presence of gold, silver, copper, or some other nonferrous metal. Am I, in fact, interpreting the detector's response correctly?
2. If yes to #1, where's me gold? More specifically, why might I receive such a response in cases where I cannot identify any ostensibly responsible mineral? Crushing and panning samples only reveals some magnetite, sand, and occassionally specs of material that looks like gold but is too light in the pan to be gold.
Might there be gold in rocks that the MD20 can detect but I cannot see even when using 50x magnification?
Hope this post isn't too convoluted. Apologies for link. I don't see a way to upload the actual video.
https://drive.google.com/file/d/131-bfQQ7YHg9ZzHbbCqn0g23HNmjkMmW/view?usp=drivesdk
I've had pretty good results using my Falcon MD20. When I receive a false positive, finding the culprit is typically pretty straightforward. ...at least up to now.
I'm currently exploring an area with highly mineralized sedimentary rocks like the ones in the very short video link. Lots of iron oxide. The samples seen in video were roasted. These rocks often elicit what I believe is a positive response from my Falcon MD20 (see link to short video). However, I don't yet understand why. Crushing and panning samples often times doesn't reveal any identifiable gold or anything else that explains my detector's response.
So, couple questions for those of you with much more knowledge and experience than I.
1. In the linked-to video, I scan an exemplar rock sample with an MD20. I believe that the detector is providing a positive response indicating presence of gold, silver, copper, or some other nonferrous metal. Am I, in fact, interpreting the detector's response correctly?
2. If yes to #1, where's me gold? More specifically, why might I receive such a response in cases where I cannot identify any ostensibly responsible mineral? Crushing and panning samples only reveals some magnetite, sand, and occassionally specs of material that looks like gold but is too light in the pan to be gold.
Might there be gold in rocks that the MD20 can detect but I cannot see even when using 50x magnification?
Hope this post isn't too convoluted. Apologies for link. I don't see a way to upload the actual video.
https://drive.google.com/file/d/131-bfQQ7YHg9ZzHbbCqn0g23HNmjkMmW/view?usp=drivesdk
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