Asmbandits
Bronze Member
- #1
Thread Owner


I've been doing some prospecting of an old mine that I've found and have interests in for further mining. I took a few samples from some of the best looking areas the old timers were chasing at the face, from what info I can find the mine was abandoned in the early 1900's as it was not as productive as they would have hoped but reports were very good prior, also there are numerous shafts close as they put a lot of work chasing something of valve. It's primarily a gold mine but also produced silver and mercury. The host is a mixture of decomposed slate with much quartz and sulfide matrix. The mine is located in northern ca but not in the gold belt region. I took about a pan of material from the face, panned the lights and saved some of the larger pieces to process at home. The light material produced some very fine flour gold so hopes were high for the better looking lager specimens. I took one small but very good oxidized rusty color chunk no larger than a half a snickers bar and carefully crushed and panned it out. I was very surprised to find not gold but something I've never seen in a pan, and what I'm thinking could be silver. It's still the heaviest thing in the pan but not as heavy as gold, it very sure its not it's not pyrite as it doesn't look like it and doesn't move like it. I've never seen anything like it and it doesn't seem to be heavy enough to be lead. The shine really makes me think it's silver. The pictures are not the best but hopefully someone can give me an opinion on what they think it is.