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
So, funny thing happened to me this weekend. Collected some magnetite from a backyard stream for my first go at smelting iron. (Just built my first forced air propane crucible furnace.) Used a magnate to pull the magnetite from the stream bed clay.
There I was Saturday grinding up a couple of handfuls of material via mortar and pestle when I look down. What do I see? About a quarter inch piece of gold flattened against the bottom of the mortar. The gold must have been encased in one of the bigger magnetite chunks. This was a bit of a shocker! I'd panned that stream several times in the past looking for gold but only came away with bits of pyrite and flakes of mica. Moreover, the damn stream is in my back yard. Go figure...
A closer look at my magnetite (after a quick dry panning) revealed a good number of small bits of gold (needed loop to see them). So question is, why did I completely miss seeing any gold in the past? Part of the answer is that I never bothered looking closely at the black sands, iron oxides, and the such. But, shouldn't I have still seen at least a little gold. Perhaps my panning skills need some work. Might the gold only be stuck in with the magnetite and no where else?
Couple things occur to me for next steps.
1. Find a reputable assay company and send off some samples to them as a sanity check. Can anyone make a recommendation?
2. Learn how to smelt gold that is mixed in with iron oxides. My first attempt yesterday didn't go very well. Lol. Ended up with a bunch of pretty black glass with little bits of iron, gold, and graphite (from my crucible, I think) all mixed together in an unholy mess. I'm reading up an Chapman flux and cuppellation (sp?) now. Should have probably done this first. Seems like a messy bit of business. Not thrilled with the idea of using lead.
Read up a little on the AR approach. Oh, hell no! As it, the wife is not thrilled with having 3000 degree blast furnace in the back yard. Adding caustic acids and other chemicals into the mix is not a good recipe for wedded bliss.
Quite an adventure so far. Any thoughts from all you seasoned, professional gold prospectors out there?
There I was Saturday grinding up a couple of handfuls of material via mortar and pestle when I look down. What do I see? About a quarter inch piece of gold flattened against the bottom of the mortar. The gold must have been encased in one of the bigger magnetite chunks. This was a bit of a shocker! I'd panned that stream several times in the past looking for gold but only came away with bits of pyrite and flakes of mica. Moreover, the damn stream is in my back yard. Go figure...
A closer look at my magnetite (after a quick dry panning) revealed a good number of small bits of gold (needed loop to see them). So question is, why did I completely miss seeing any gold in the past? Part of the answer is that I never bothered looking closely at the black sands, iron oxides, and the such. But, shouldn't I have still seen at least a little gold. Perhaps my panning skills need some work. Might the gold only be stuck in with the magnetite and no where else?
Couple things occur to me for next steps.
1. Find a reputable assay company and send off some samples to them as a sanity check. Can anyone make a recommendation?
2. Learn how to smelt gold that is mixed in with iron oxides. My first attempt yesterday didn't go very well. Lol. Ended up with a bunch of pretty black glass with little bits of iron, gold, and graphite (from my crucible, I think) all mixed together in an unholy mess. I'm reading up an Chapman flux and cuppellation (sp?) now. Should have probably done this first. Seems like a messy bit of business. Not thrilled with the idea of using lead.
Read up a little on the AR approach. Oh, hell no! As it, the wife is not thrilled with having 3000 degree blast furnace in the back yard. Adding caustic acids and other chemicals into the mix is not a good recipe for wedded bliss.
Quite an adventure so far. Any thoughts from all you seasoned, professional gold prospectors out there?
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