DeepseekerADS
Gold Member
- Mar 3, 2013
- 14,880
- 21,733
- Detector(s) used
- CTX, Excal II, EQ800, Fisher 1260X, Tesoro Royal Sabre, Tejon, Garrett ADSIII, Carrot, Stealth 920iX, Keene A52
- Primary Interest:
- Other
I was in Virginia last week. After the labor day crowd left I went fishing at Virginia Beach. I thought of you for a couple of reasons, first I was in Virginia and second I saw a guy with a metal detector scouring the beach and digging up the sand where he got hits. I remember some treasure hunting I did and thought you might like to hear the story.
When I was in graduate school I worked for a Professor in the aquatic biology department and some research I did involved aquatic insects. I spent a good deal of time studying the Tricoptera, and I was so into it that I actually discovered a previously unidentified species. One of the fascinating things about the group I studied was that they lived on the rocks at the bottom of fast flowing streams and they are always in danger of being washed downstream to become trout food. One of the unique ecological adaptations they have made to this existence is the construction of cases made of small rocks they pick up from the bottom and build into mobile homes, kind of like hermit crabs do only on a much smaller scale. They pick up and discard small stones until they find the "right" ones and then they cement them into a shell. One of the things they like in a stone is density, the heavier they are the better they serve to hold themselves down.
One of my friends who was a Doctoral Student told me about a guy who studied Tricoptera in the Middle American region whose name was (removed). Turns out (removed) was researching and collecting in the streams in the Black Hills and he would semi-routinely find cases that used small gold nuggets as ballast stones. I guess the bugs liked them because they were so heavy. (removed) said he had seen some of them and the story was true, there were small gold nuggets incorporated into the cases. He did not say where exactly he found them but it really does make perfect sense that any stream likely holding gold nuggets and Caddis flies (Tricoptera) wound yield an occasional larval or pupal case with gold in it. When I was in the black hills I looked. I found lots of caddis cases but no nuggets. I don't collect as much as I used to, my eyes are failing me, but who knows maybe some day.......
Hang in there.
When I was in graduate school I worked for a Professor in the aquatic biology department and some research I did involved aquatic insects. I spent a good deal of time studying the Tricoptera, and I was so into it that I actually discovered a previously unidentified species. One of the fascinating things about the group I studied was that they lived on the rocks at the bottom of fast flowing streams and they are always in danger of being washed downstream to become trout food. One of the unique ecological adaptations they have made to this existence is the construction of cases made of small rocks they pick up from the bottom and build into mobile homes, kind of like hermit crabs do only on a much smaller scale. They pick up and discard small stones until they find the "right" ones and then they cement them into a shell. One of the things they like in a stone is density, the heavier they are the better they serve to hold themselves down.
One of my friends who was a Doctoral Student told me about a guy who studied Tricoptera in the Middle American region whose name was (removed). Turns out (removed) was researching and collecting in the streams in the Black Hills and he would semi-routinely find cases that used small gold nuggets as ballast stones. I guess the bugs liked them because they were so heavy. (removed) said he had seen some of them and the story was true, there were small gold nuggets incorporated into the cases. He did not say where exactly he found them but it really does make perfect sense that any stream likely holding gold nuggets and Caddis flies (Tricoptera) wound yield an occasional larval or pupal case with gold in it. When I was in the black hills I looked. I found lots of caddis cases but no nuggets. I don't collect as much as I used to, my eyes are failing me, but who knows maybe some day.......
Hang in there.
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