Mgumby16
Full Member
Hello all, I have a piece of private property that I dredge on and while conducting a sampling regime on a portion of the creek, one of the test holes encountered a layer of gray clay about 1 foot thick and sits directly on bedrock (it is not weathered bedrock as it has small stream gravel in it). This test hole produced 8.6 grains in about 2 hours of dredging mainly chunky stuff very little fines. I watched small balls of clay roll down and out of the sluice. So Im thinking that the clay may have robbed the fines out of the sluice, so i wanted to see if anyone had made an attachment for a dredge nozzle to help break up the clay before it even entered the hose.
I was thinking of making a removal attachment that consists of expanded metal maybe about 1/2 inch openings. When this is pushed down into the clay the clay will be better broken up then just pushing the normal nozzle into it. Has anyone done something like this?
Gold from the test hole with clay (8.6 grains), added up to almost half of what was recovered for the weekend (about 19.6 grains for the weekend)
Thanks,
I was thinking of making a removal attachment that consists of expanded metal maybe about 1/2 inch openings. When this is pushed down into the clay the clay will be better broken up then just pushing the normal nozzle into it. Has anyone done something like this?
Gold from the test hole with clay (8.6 grains), added up to almost half of what was recovered for the weekend (about 19.6 grains for the weekend)
Thanks,