https://www.discovermagazine.com/environment/sewage-sludge-is-flush-with-gold-and-platinumSwinging & digging said:So where does this gold come from?
mbasko said:https://www.discovermagazine.com/environment/sewage-sludge-is-flush-with-gold-and-platinumSwinging & digging said:So where does this gold come from?
"Metals get into wastewater in a variety of ways: from electronics and jewelry manufacturers, mining, electroplating and industrial catalysts. Researchers estimate that, globally, 360 tons of gold accumulates in sewage sludge every year."
mbasko said:Might head out to Gulgong & do a few test pans tomorrow layful: oop: :lol:
I'm a bit doubtful about that. There is limited gold in the Werribee catchment and in other areas overseas that have gold-rich sewage (eg Tokyo, where it is being recovered). And there is plenty of gold in industrial processes and medicines. Sea water is not particularly elevated (around 6 parts per trillion gold) - with modern analytical techniques we can detect almost any element in anything. And concentrations would be much lower in fresh water than seawater - in seawater gold can form a chloride complex because the water contains 3% salt. The water used at Werribee is either fresh water of the sewage system or Werribee and other local river water, not sea water. Elevated values in Swiss sewage correlate with an area with gold refineries. My suspicion is that it has nothing to do with gold in fresh streamwater, but in gold being transported as gold organic complexes much more soluble than simple ionic gold. Chlorination and chloramination of water produces cyanide, phosphine (which forms gold ligands) is generated naturally because of high phosphorous contents, and various sulphur compounds occur naturally,Swinging & digging said:mbasko said:https://www.discovermagazine.com/environment/sewage-sludge-is-flush-with-gold-and-platinumSwinging & digging said:So where does this gold come from?
"Metals get into wastewater in a variety of ways: from electronics and jewelry manufacturers, mining, electroplating and industrial catalysts. Researchers estimate that, globally, 360 tons of gold accumulates in sewage sludge every year."
I had assumed all of the above.
Though I did hear a radio segment speaking about it perhaps 23 years ago.
Researches first thought the gold came from above sources you mention, though found out the source
of the gold was coming out of gold bearing stream catchments, we know there is dissolved gold in ocean water.
From memory the segment I heard was reporting on analysis of waste water from Castlemaine in Victoria, once
a very rich alluvial goldfield.
Need a reference to this - 'high levels" can be in the eye of the beholder, and it does not explain the high levels in city sewage (the only potentially economic source)Swinging & digging said:That does not explain why the wastewater samples from Castlemaine contained high levels of gold present compared to other areas.
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