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Placer mining
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==Methods== A number of methods are used to mine placer gold and gems, both in terms of extracting the minerals from the ground, and separating it from the non-gold or non-gems. ===Panning=== {{Main|Gold panning}} [[File:Placer gold-mining, Korea, c1900.jpg|thumb|Panning for gold in [[Korea]], c. 1900]] The simplest technique to extract gold from placer ore is [[Gold panning|panning]]. This technique has been dated back to at least the Roman Empire.<ref>{{Cite book|title=Roman Deep Vein Mining|last=Cohen Duncan|first=Lynn|year=1999}}</ref> In panning, some mined ore is placed in a large metal or plastic pan, combined with a generous amount of [[water]], and agitated so that the gold particles, being of higher [[density]] than the other material, settle to the bottom of the pan. The lighter [[gangue]] material such as sand, mud and gravel are then washed over the side of the pan, leaving the gold behind. Once a placer deposit is located by gold panning, the miner usually shifts to equipment that can treat volumes of sand and gravel more quickly and efficiently. Gold panning was commonly used on its own during the [[California Gold Rush|California gold rush]];<ref>{{Cite book|title=Western Mining|url=https://archive.org/details/westernmininginf0000youn|url-access=registration|last=Young|first=Otis|publisher=University of Oklahoma Press|year=1970|location=Oklahoma|pages=[https://archive.org/details/westernmininginf0000youn/page/108 108]β110|isbn=9780806109091 }}</ref> however, it is rarely profitable anymore since even an expert gold prospector can only process approximately one cubic yard of material for every 10 hours of work.<ref name=":0">{{Cite book|title=Methods of Placer Mining|last=Basque|first=G.|publisher=Heritage House|year=1999|location=Surrey, B.C.}}</ref> ===Rocker=== {{Main|Rocker box}} A rocker box (or "cradle") is capable of greater volume than a gold pan; however, its production is still limited when compared to other methods of placer mining. It is only capable of processing about 3 or 4 yards of gravel a day.<ref name=":0" /> It is more portable and requires less infrastructure than a sluice box, being fed not by a sluice but by hand. The box sits on rockers, which when rocked separates out the gold, and the practice was referred to as "rocking the golden baby". A typical rocker box is approximately 42 inches long, 16 inches wide and 12 inches deep with a removable tray towards the top, where gold is captured.<ref>Basque, G. (1999). Methods of placer mining. Surrey, B.C: Heritage House. p. 41</ref> The rocker was commonly used throughout North America during the early gold rush, but its popularity diminished as other methods that could handle a larger volume became more common.<ref name=":0" /> <!--maybe used in California, I'm not sure--> ===Sluice box=== {{redirect|Sluice box|the general topic|sluice|the Montana park|Sluice Boxes State Park}} [[File:Blei-und-Gold.jpg|thumb|[[Riffle]]s in a sluice box. The small specks are gold, the larger ones are merely pebbles]] [[File:Goldwaschrinne.jpg|thumb|left|A modern sluice box made of metal; in its base are the riffles used to catch gold settling to the bottom]] The same principle may be employed on a larger scale by constructing a short [[sluice|sluice box]], with barriers along the bottom called riffles to trap the heavier gold particles as water washes them and the other material along the box. This method better suits excavation with [[shovel]]s or similar implements to feed ore into the device. Sluice boxes can be as short as a few feet, or more than ten feet (a common term for one that is over six feet +/- is a "Long Tom"). While they are capable of handling a larger volume of material than simpler methods such as the rocker box or gold panning, this can come at the cost of efficiency, since conventional sluice boxes have been found to recover only about 40% of the gold that they process.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Subasinghe|first=G. K. N. S.|date=1993|title=Optimal Design of Sluice-Boxes for Fine Gold Recovery|journal=Minerals Engineering|volume=6 |issue=11|pages=1155β1165|doi=10.1016/0892-6875(93)90093-3|bibcode=1993MiEng...6.1155S }}</ref> [[File:Placer Mines, William G. Chamberlain photo showing mining operations - DPLA - 1beeeabe4036b0295ed517fbf7614f62.jpg|thumb|Placer mines in Park County, Colorado, 1870s. A long sluice box runs along the mine.<ref>[https://pclha.cvlcollections.org/items/show/75 Park County Local History Digital Archive]</ref>]] The sluice box was used extensively during the [[California Gold Rush|California gold rush]] for larger scale operations. When streams became increasingly depleted, the grizzly and undercurrent variants of the sluice box were developed. The grizzly is a set of parallel bars placed at a 45-degree angle over the main sluice box, which filter out larger material. The undercurrent variety includes additional, auxiliary sluice boxes where material is initially filtered. It then travels through a trough into the primary sluice box where it is filtered again. Both the grizzly and undercurrent are designed to increase efficiency, and were often used in combination.<ref name=":0" /> ===Dry washing=== {{main|Drywasher}} Sluicing is only effective in areas where there is a sufficient water supply, and is impractical in arid areas. Alternative methods developed that used the blowing of air to separate out gold from sand. One of the more common methods of dry washing is the Mexican dry wash. This method involves placing gravel on a riffle board with a bellows placed underneath it. The bellows is then used to blow air through the board in order to remove the lighter material from the heavier gold.<ref>{{Cite book|title=Finding Gold in the Desert: the Art of Dry-Washing|last=Lynch|first=O.|year=2001}}</ref> The amount of gravel that can be processed using the Mexican dry wash technique varies from 1 1/2 to 4 cubic yards per day, and can be processed at a maximum efficiency of 80%.<ref>{{Cite book|title=Placer Mining in Nevada|last=Smith|first=Alfred Merrit|publisher=University of Nevada Bulletin|year=1932|location=Reno, Nevada}}</ref> Another form of dry washing is "[[winnowing]]". This method was most commonly used by Spanish miners in America, and only requires a blanket and a box with a screen on the bottom. The material is first filtered through the box so only the finer material is placed onto the blanket. The material on the blanket is then flung into the air so that any breeze can blow away the lighter material and leave the gold behind. While this method is extremely simple and requires very few materials, it is also slow and inefficient.<ref name=":0" /> ===Trommel=== [[File:Alaskan Trommel.jpg|thumb|Trommel at the Potato Patch, [[Yentna-Cache Creek mining district|Blue Ribbon Mine]], Alaska]] A [[trommel]] is composed of a slightly inclined rotating metal tube (the 'scrubber section') with a screen at its discharge end. Lifter bars, sometimes in the form of bolted in angle iron, are attached to the interior of the scrubber section. The ore is fed into the elevated end of the trommel. Water, often under pressure, is provided to the scrubber and screen sections and the combination of water and mechanical action frees the valuable heavy minerals from the lighter gravel. The mineral bearing ore that passes through the screen is then further concentrated in smaller devices such as sluices and jigs. The larger pieces of ore that do not pass through the screen can be carried to a waste stack by a conveyor. ===Gold dredge=== {{main|Gold dredge}} [[File:Natomas-6-gold dredge-1958.jpg|thumb|The Natomas No. 6 gold dredge in operation in 1958 in [[Folsom, California]]]] Large-scale sifting of placer gold from large volumes of alluvial deposits can be done by use of mechanical dredges. These dredges were originally very large boats capable of processing massive amounts of material; however, as the gold has become increasingly depleted in the most easily accessible areas, smaller and more maneuverable dredges have become much more common.<ref name=":0" /> These smaller dredges commonly operate by sucking water and gravel up through long hoses using a pump, where the gold can then be separated using more traditional methods such as a sluice box.<ref name=":0" /> [[File:Placer Mines, worker steaming water to assist with mining operations, early 1900s - DPLA - d69dee0966eca12491731817b30ee312.jpg|left|thumb|Placer mine worker streams high pressure water to assist with mining operations in Park County, Colorado, early 1900s<ref>[https://pclha.cvlcollections.org/items/show/73 Park County Local History Digital Archive]</ref>]] ===Underground mining=== [[File:Mining with steam points.jpg|thumb|Miners using jets of steam to melt the [[permafrost]] in an underground gold mine]] In areas where the ground is [[permafrost|permanently frozen]], such as in Siberia, Alaska, and the Yukon, placer deposits may be mined underground.<ref name="Colliery Underground">{{cite book|title=Placer Mining: A Hand-Book for Klondike and Other Miners and Prospectors|year=1897|publisher=Colliery Engineering Co.|location=Scranton, Pa.|pages=[https://archive.org/details/placermininghand00coll/page/66 66]β69|url=https://archive.org/details/placermininghand00coll}}</ref> As the frozen ground is otherwise too hard and firm to mine by hand, historically fires were built so as to thaw the ground before digging it.<ref name="Colliery Underground" /> Later methods involve blasting jets of steam ("points") into the frozen deposits. [[Placer mining#Deep leads|'''Deep leads''']] are accessed by techniques similar to conventional underground mining.
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