The Peralta Stone Maps, Real Maps to Lost Gold Mines or Cruel Hoax?

Do you think the Peralta stone maps are genuine, or fake?


  • Total voters
    121
There is no connection between the dutchman and peralta stones.I have found someone every marking of the stones.if everyone enters the superstition go by your dutchman information.also everyone talks of the house/cavern.look at the latin hearts, you will see the cavern and I have have already located it. Some may be angry and not believe me, but maybe one day you'll thank me and you won't look in an area that doesn't have markings.good luck
 

Filed a 1 sq mile mining claim today for ldm/peralta mine. guarded

A lode mining claim is 1500 ft x 600 ft. To cover a square mile completely (5280 ft x 5280 ft), you would need a block of claims four wide x 9 deep = 36 mining claims. Did you file 36 mining claims today?
 

Don't believe I heard of any claim.one person on this network tried to rip me off and the information he received won't help him, you must have info from second map.
 

Being from Connecticut, I am wondering if any of these silver and gold mines ever been found.
 

hey all...

Thank you for the welcome back Don Jose... seems around this time every year I get this feeling I might miss something, so I check in. :hello2:

Janiece/gossamer
 

First new find in five days of searching an area surrounding the "leaning cross" of the Horse Stone.
A small cross, about 5-6", cut into a vertical rock face and barely noticeable.
I wondered about the extra line which seemed to point to the upper right, so I had a look.
About 200' to the right and 100' above, I found a cinnabar mine.

Regards:SH.
 

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a closer look at the seam.
 

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Cool. You down for the winter, or just a visit?
What would you do with that?
Mostly sulpher right?
 

I know where the mines are that everyones looking for, been there and it's in plain sight. Everyone walks right past it. Too keep it a secret, A miner never reveals the true location of a mine, and amateurs bring trouble to themselves telling the exact spot they found something... because you know damn well someone else is going to show up and look after someone posts something. I decided not to go to the Dutch Hunters Rendezvous, because I don't want someone to see my face then track me down or be on the look out. So it's best to post on here and leave it at that. When I go out to eat in Apache Junction, you won't know who the hell I'am and vice versa. I will post my finds later, I have a few Mine's and they are in the Wilderness. There is Gold in the Supes, but everyone is looking in the same damned places everyone else is looking. A fool would say; that there's no gold in the supes or the LDM isn't real. I will tell you that the LDM is an old Jesuit / Spanish Mine. The 2 Stash Locations on Weaver's Needle are Spanish. The Mine's are sealed, the "LDM" Mine isn't sealed. There are many caves there and there is no tree's there, just some bushes etc. I will post more later, I'm not on here a lot and I'm out working in my Mine's. TTYL...

Dude, slow down on the Acid. It's LDM, not "LSD." When you stop peaking and come down two-days from now, maybe you'll realize just how high you were when you typed these last two responses. I just hope you stay on the ground floor of buildings and stop thinking you can fly..
 

"Cool. You down for the winter, or just a visit?
What would you do with that? Mostly sulpher right?
"

roadrunner:
Just down for two weeks this trip. And for the Rendezvous. Cinnabar was / is a common source for mercury. Mercury is handy for amalgamation of gold in the "patio process" If anyone was concentrating gold within the supes, and casting gold dore bars, they may have used that process.

Regards:SH.
 

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That's interesting. I will check youtube out that process.
Thanks.
 

Shadowrider
WOW I hardly know where to start, first there were no coins minted or used in colonial Spain Sonora or otherwise and none used by the Jesuits
second what a crock of bullsH*T
People like you give treasurehunters a bad name
GO HOME
Alan
 

"Cool. You down for the winter, or just a visit?
What would you do with that? Mostly sulpher right?
"

roadrunner:
Just down for two weeks this trip. And for the Rendezvous. Cinnabar was / is a common source for mercury. Mercury is handy for amalgamation of gold in the "patio process" If anyone was concentrating gold within the supes, and casting gold dore bars, they may have used that process.

Regards:SH.

Nice find Wayne - the cross clearly looks man made and the cinnabar vein looks very similar in appearance to the one in Hatt's "mercury mine" location. Jim's cinnabar vein assayed with a very small amount of gold. I'll touch base with you in the coming days - I just now got home today and am still pretty exhausted.
 

First new find in five days of searching an area surrounding the "leaning cross" of the Horse Stone.
A small cross, about 5-6", cut into a vertical rock face and barely noticeable.
I wondered about the extra line which seemed to point to the upper right, so I had a look.
About 200' to the right and 100' above, I found a cinnabar mine.

Regards:SH.
5 days,that`s a pretty long stay. After 3 I was spent. I read the story about some guys that found some gold bars buried in a cache that was laid out in the corners of a cross formation. Maybe your area warrants more re-search.
 

Hi Chuck:

Just got home tonight from my 14 day vacation.
The weather was perfect for my 12 days in the range, 11 which were spent in the field and one full day in the Don's Camp with Greg and Clay, Tom and Bucky and that older dog Joe of course. Did a ton of off-trail hunting and probably more climbing that I've ever done before, some of which involved the finger and toe work necessary to get a looksee into the vast number of crannies and caves up high. I hiked several areas which I hadn't visited in some time...and a couple of areas new to me...and spent a number of those days out there with Tim and George and Frank,who all attended the Rendezvous and which turned out to be some of the best days I've ever experienced while exploring the hills. I was able to find some of what I had been looking for, relative to what is shown on the Stone Maps, but I still have work to do in that regard. I also had the opportunity to delve a bit into the DeGrazia Treasure, exploring an area that I suspected might be related to his buried paintings. There I discovered two things worth further investigation, one of which can be found in two other places in the general area as well as on the grounds of DeGrazia's Gallery in Tucson. All in, it was probably one of the more productive trips which I have made to date.

Regards:SH.
 

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