Thanks Rod.
Syndyne said:Hi all,
Wonderful to see that gold in those pieces Paul! I'd do a little happy dance if I saw that too
Not discounting Wal's thought's of Greenstone as there's a small chance that could be possible, but to me that looks very much like Serpentine you have there. It wouldn't surprise me if so, as it's quite a common occurring mineral, particularly among gold bearing areas with Quartz outcroppings. It's much softer than Quartz on the Moh's scale so it would make sense that it's worn down more in the tumbling process. Greenstone (or Jadeite) is quite a hard material at around Moh's 6-6.5 so I wouldn't suspect it to ware down as much as that during tumbling with the associated Quartz -and it would take a nicer final polish than that also.
Very nice specimens none the less! Be interesting to see that final gold content tally.
Kindest regards,
Shauno.
headbut said:WalnLiz said:Confusing looking calculation you have there mate....lay mans version...
1. Weigh dry stone. "A"
2. Get small plastic container (eg marg tub), fill with enough water to submerge the stone without hitting sides or bottom. Tare your scales to zero.
3. Suspend stone and record weight. "B"
4. Divide "A" by "B"....that equals SG.
5. If SG is above 2.65 do a dance of excitement .....but make sure no one is watching.
Cheers Wal.
Hi Wal , should it be divide A by C (diff between A & B) ?
Hi Wal, can you explain what you mean by suspending and submerging? Do you tie the specimen with string and dangle it by hand into the water until it is submerged?WalnLiz said:Nope...just divide A by B. Make sure you zero (tare) your scales before submerging your stone.
cheers wal.
TTKooAu said:Hi Wal, can you explain what you mean by suspending and submerging? Do you tie the specimen with string and dangle it by hand into the water until it is submerged?WalnLiz said:Nope...just divide A by B. Make sure you zero (tare) your scales before submerging your stone.
cheers wal.
TT
Ramjet said:Hi TT
Check this video on how to sespend the specimen...
[video=480,360]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GF4NqIYh6zg[/video]
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