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Very pretty stuff!
I have a hard rock mine and am always thrilled to see people find something exciting. Are you able to sell those rocks as specimens or mill this ore to retrieve the gold?
I have sold a few as spec pieces . I have gave some away for various reasons ; presents and such .
I've gave some to landowners . If it's not a good piece ...... In my opinion ...... I crush it out and take
the gold . I've only been hunt'n gold for about 12 years and the first couple of those I was pretty much
half ass'n it . Actually hunted as much in Georgia as I did in Alabama for several years , just different
types and ways of hunt'n and doing things . I had no land connections in Georgia , so it was smash
and grab road gold , knock and pay , walk the water via public right of way or hit development / constuction
type sites . Paid more than one equipment security guard in my time . Took some good gold from
Georgia but I have developed a far better situation in my home state so I haven't been over there
in a couple of years , not to hunt gold anyway .
You git'n anything good off your stuff ? I like to see other peoples stuff .
oh...he works veins....not all that randomly
Piece of ore from the Cripple Creek Mining District. The purple stuff is flourite, the shiny stuff is calaverite and the gray stuff is porphry. This is a telluride ore. The ore was usually roasted, then crushed and cyanided. In 1900 the Cripple Creek District produced over 1 million ounces of gold. This area was not founded until 1891. I posted this sample because I rarely ever see any telluride type ores on here. This sample is worth more as a raw specimen than the gold it contains. If you double click on the picture it will show the detail in full screen!
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cripple_Creek_%26_Victor_Gold_Mine
<img src="http://www.treasurenet.com/forums/attachment.php?attachmentid=1008914"/>
Piece of ore from the Cripple Creek Mining District. The purple stuff is flourite, the shiny stuff is calaverite and the gray stuff is porphry. This is a telluride ore. The ore was usually roasted, then crushed and cyanided. In 1900 the Cripple Creek District produced over 1 million ounces of gold. This area was not founded until 1891. I posted this sample because I rarely ever see any telluride type ores on here. This sample is worth more as a raw specimen than the gold it contains. If you double click on the picture it will show the detail in full screen!
Cripple Creek & Victor Gold Mine - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
View attachment 1008914