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Placering Gold Panning in Colorado
Colorado gold and where panning and placering is done is as diverse as the deposits that can be found here. The discovery of gold in Colorado, the beginning of the mining industry that became larger in a bit more than a generation and the geology and mineralogy of the deposits of gold that exist in this state are all fascinating. Gold was first discovered here in Arapahoe County on Cherry Creek that runs into the South Platte River in 1859. Over 40 million troy ounces of gold have been discovered since then. Placer deposits are the most essential and best places for recovering gold for those that are amateurs at the job. Native gold is not only the gold that can be found more frequently but is also easier to find, recover and take home with you. With this in mind, one of the first things you should learn about is the different type of placers that exist and where they can be located. Placers of all types are placed under two main classifications, which consists of dry placers and wet placers. Both types of placers can be worked on for finding gold or other heavy and precious minerals however, wet placers that have enough water for sluicing are definitely a lot easier to work with, even if they are not always necessarily the richest. While the idea of this site is to provide information on all the types of weekend prospecting, one specific segment is definitely considered the most popular and it consists is something a lot of new prospectors enjoy since it is one of the easiest forms of prospecting, which is gold panning. There are also other types of prospecting that include sluicing and dredging but these are more sophisticated types of placering. In Colorado gold panning and placering is done. The biggest gold nugget that was ever found in North America was found in Breckinridge, July 3, 1887 by a man named Tom Groves. The nugget Tom Groves found weighed 151 ounces! It was called “Tom’s Baby” because he paraded around town with his huge nugget and carried it in his arms like a baby. Nobody knows what became of this nugget though. |