Stuart
Member
Gee, all this from my first simple post. 

Oh! la laGee, all this from my first simple post.![]()
It's interesting to see the different experiences and perspectives on gold prospecting in Australia. It seems like there are various factors to consider, from flora and fauna to geological features. Have any of you found unique indicators or methods that have been particularly successful in your prospecting? Thanks for sharing your insights!
MickAnybody here have any experience running a small mining operation?
The current (and projected) gold price has me thinking of throwing in my real job and working on my lease
A mate has been scratching around there for the last couple of years and he thinks he has found where the good stuff is, but we'll need to get all our old crappy gear going.
Anybody here have any experience running a small mining operation?
The current (and projected) gold price has me thinking of throwing in my real job and working on my lease
A mate has been scratching around there for the last couple of years and he thinks he has found where the good stuff is, but we'll need to get all our old crappy gear going.
Gold you can’t see. Mostly untouched in Australia for lack of water and the use of cyanide is frowned upon by small miners.What is Nano Gold if I can ask please. That all makes good sense, I'll make note of that and follow it when I go over to WA.
Mining for a living.... first check out the vehicles your fellow miners are driving.... what are their living conditions like? Owning a gold mine is more likely to indicate that you are broke than rolling in money.
There is an Echo-friendly Leach that can be reused over again. Easily used by scale miners. It is a Glycine leach. You can do the process in a bottle rollGold you can’t see. Mostly untouched in Australia for lack of water and the use of cyanide is frowned upon by small miners.
Curtin University in Perth Australia developed the Glycine/ Hydrogen peroxide Gold LeachThere is an Echo-friendly Leach that can be reused over again. Easily used by scale miners. It is a Glycine leach. You can do the process in a bottle roll
system, small scale. Go on be a devil and take a fly at it, The manufacturers are in Perth Australia.
Can you give a google maps reference to a spot you'ld consider as a possibility?I beg to differ about flora not being an indicator and use it to my advantage as do many who use google earth at one of their tools when prospecting.
Flora can show you old water courses, where ground is deeper. Creek systems etc… Some plants only grow in certain mineral rich areas which also can hold gold.
Things like a line of dessert currajongs can betray an ancient water course or a fault or crack in the bedrock.
Hi Frank, as much as I’d like to I can’t afford to do that. Gold is my sole source of income so any spot I’d consider looking at I will be looking at.Can you give a google maps reference to a spot you'ld consider as a possibility?
I'm not dumb enough to ask you for a link to your favourite spot,
Rather a link to a spot you'ld consider looking at,
And what influenced your thinking, based on looking at Google earth?
This is just some random spot somewhere on the Bandya road. You can clearly see the creek line and old pushings. Someone clearly got some decent gold there to go to that much trouble@Madtuna, your way of using the maps and Google Earth to see where previous diggings are sounded interesting once a person learns how to do it.
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