EngiNerd
Jr. Member
Hello to everyone!
I did my first gold panning trip to the Uwharrie National Forest, and we had a blast! After spending a couple hours doing a hike, we set up doing some panning at one of the creeks. I found a gravel bar down from one of the bridges and started panning on the front end of a gravel bar. After panning a while near the surface, and finding nothing (not surprised), I grabbed the shovel, and stared digging down. At this point, it was getting late afternoon, and so I ran the rock and such through a ~10 mesh (daughters sand sieve!) and put it in a small bucket to pan later at the house.
So, I ran the cons through some fiberglass screen door material (14x18 mesh), and then tried the Two Bucket method to separate out the cons some more, before finishing up with some panning (not sold on the two bucket method, but that is for another post!). Still have some material to go thorough, but so far nothing. Again, not surprised, as the spot I picked is not hard to reach, and I am sure the area has been panned before. In fact, we ran into 3 guys panning just down stream from us. They were moving around, panning here and there; not staying in one spot very long. They moved up another branch of the stream.
A couple of gravel bar questions. Can I assume that the deeper I dig in a gravel bar, the further I am going back in time? Did the deeper material get deposited further back in time? If this is true, is there an estimate of when it was deposited? For example, for every foot of depth, you are digging through material from, say, 10 years ago (making up numbers here, ok!)?? One observation I also made was that the shallow material (<6 inches) was not smooth; lots of sharp edges. Being down from a bridge, I assumed this material had washed down from the bridge, and was deposited during a flood. As I went deeper, the rock became much smoother, like you would expect from older river rock. I was still pulling some sharp edge stone, but I think this was material falling into my hole as I was digging.
Pics say a thousand words, so here are two photos showing details of where I was digging. First is looking down stream, with my sample hole next to the buckets. You can clearly see the gravel bar going around the bend, and you can also see how high the water gets during a flood (right bank is about 6 foot from water level to the top). The little dam was built by my 7 year old daughter. She had a BLAST playing in the stream and helping dad screen material.
Here is a photo looking upstream, back towards the bridge, and another gravel bar (left side, just in front of the wife). I did not pan that gravel bar, as there was clear evidence of a sluice box operation, with a pile of tailings.
The plan right now is on my next visit, to move a little down the gravel bar (say 3-4 feet, maybe where the little dam is at) and dig another hole. But being a green horn at this, I will listen to any suggestions.
Thanks for reading this far and not falling asleep!!
EngiNerd
I did my first gold panning trip to the Uwharrie National Forest, and we had a blast! After spending a couple hours doing a hike, we set up doing some panning at one of the creeks. I found a gravel bar down from one of the bridges and started panning on the front end of a gravel bar. After panning a while near the surface, and finding nothing (not surprised), I grabbed the shovel, and stared digging down. At this point, it was getting late afternoon, and so I ran the rock and such through a ~10 mesh (daughters sand sieve!) and put it in a small bucket to pan later at the house.
So, I ran the cons through some fiberglass screen door material (14x18 mesh), and then tried the Two Bucket method to separate out the cons some more, before finishing up with some panning (not sold on the two bucket method, but that is for another post!). Still have some material to go thorough, but so far nothing. Again, not surprised, as the spot I picked is not hard to reach, and I am sure the area has been panned before. In fact, we ran into 3 guys panning just down stream from us. They were moving around, panning here and there; not staying in one spot very long. They moved up another branch of the stream.
A couple of gravel bar questions. Can I assume that the deeper I dig in a gravel bar, the further I am going back in time? Did the deeper material get deposited further back in time? If this is true, is there an estimate of when it was deposited? For example, for every foot of depth, you are digging through material from, say, 10 years ago (making up numbers here, ok!)?? One observation I also made was that the shallow material (<6 inches) was not smooth; lots of sharp edges. Being down from a bridge, I assumed this material had washed down from the bridge, and was deposited during a flood. As I went deeper, the rock became much smoother, like you would expect from older river rock. I was still pulling some sharp edge stone, but I think this was material falling into my hole as I was digging.
Pics say a thousand words, so here are two photos showing details of where I was digging. First is looking down stream, with my sample hole next to the buckets. You can clearly see the gravel bar going around the bend, and you can also see how high the water gets during a flood (right bank is about 6 foot from water level to the top). The little dam was built by my 7 year old daughter. She had a BLAST playing in the stream and helping dad screen material.
Here is a photo looking upstream, back towards the bridge, and another gravel bar (left side, just in front of the wife). I did not pan that gravel bar, as there was clear evidence of a sluice box operation, with a pile of tailings.
The plan right now is on my next visit, to move a little down the gravel bar (say 3-4 feet, maybe where the little dam is at) and dig another hole. But being a green horn at this, I will listen to any suggestions.
Thanks for reading this far and not falling asleep!!
EngiNerd
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