Just received an assay report on a sample of rock

Ogtetowman

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I'm new to this forum , so please bear with me . I came across a rock which weighs 11 lbs or so a few years back and finally sent a piece , 3 oz , to a lab which did an atomic absorbtion test on it . These are the results : gold .786 , silver .155 , platinum .041 , palladium .027 , osmium .033 , ruthenium .058 , iridium .008 , rhodium .016 . So how do I procede .
 

Welcome to T-net.

What were the reported units of measurement? The numbers are completely meaningless without that information.
 

Not really describing a "rock." That's 18K gold.
 

That’s indeed 18k gold.

Can we see a nice photo of the sample, and of the whole specimen?
 

11 pounds of 18 gold would be worth quite a lot. Picture, please!
 

I'm new to this forum , so please bear with me . I came across a rock ...
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1st - I noticed this was your very first post - so, Welcome Aboard Ogtetowman! You didn't list your state (or country) in your profile. So, you might consider jumping over to Sub-Forum: Select Your Area.... for information (i.e., clubs, hunts, finds, legends, maps, etc.) directly related to your state (or country).

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2nd - A picture(s) is worth a zillion words! If you are having problems posting pictures - take a look at: How to post pictures with your story...
 

Not really describing a "rock." That's 18K gold.

How can it be 18k gold? If those are proportional fractions they add up to an impossible 1.12 (ie 112%).

Without knowing what the reported units are, the numbers are meaningless. Parts per million? Parts per billion? Something else?
 

Yes, parts per million, parts per billion, what is it?
 

I came across a rock which weighs 11 lbs or so a few years back <snip> So how do I procede .

Send it to me. You've left it laying around for years. You won't miss it.
 

How can it be 18k gold? If those are proportional fractions they add up to an impossible 1.12 (ie 112%).

Without knowing what the reported units are, the numbers are meaningless. Parts per million? Parts per billion? Something else?

First off, this is one of those posts. I didn't add anything up, just looked at his first number for gold, and glanced at what else he put down. It would be approximately 18K. Not spending any more time on this.
 

Usually AA analysis is reported in ppb (parts per billion)

Without seeing the rest of the results of the assay it appears you found a rock.
 

Is rock “gold. Colored”
 

'm new to this forum , so please bear with me . I came across a rock which weighs 11 lbs or so a few years back and finally sent a piece , 3 oz , to a lab which did an atomic absorbtion test on it . These are the results : gold .786 , silver .155 , platinum .041 , palladium .027 , osmium .033 , ruthenium .058 , iridium .008 , rhodium .016 . So how do I procede .

I suggest you give your Mommy back her ring....
 

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