sulfites ,sulfates, two things I can't find out much about. including sulfides. It seems like everybody uses those words for things they can't figure out. perhaps it's because I can't figure it out that I don't understand it. Hopefully in your series it'll explain it to me better. why are they so hard to get rid of when you want to extract gold? why are they tied up so tightly? looking forward to the rest of the series, thank you.
David Myers all those questions answered in the videos, but let me know if you have remaining questions. If you found an extinct volcano with hydrothermal ore deposits, there will most likely be associated sulfides. Sulfates are more of a surface ocean thing.
question, gypsum with its variations, i have found a deposit in Franklin county idaho, heres my question why is it the needle like crystals seem to have grown in layers? like maybe different oceanic events? im consistently find it in 4 layers, 1st is 1/2 inch, 2nd is 3/4 inch, 3rd is 2 inchs, 4th is 5/8 inch. thats thickness.
Ion concentration dependent, but actually you are right. Common sea water puts out gypsum before halite. This is definitely something I need to correct. Thanks for pointing it out.
fitting song: music.ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-6cyHVZk74Jc.html wonder if the more pointy pyramids like the pyramids of Bir Tawil and the Gypt of Egypt has a relation..
Given its broad application, everyone should understand GEOLOGY - therefore this video has been indexed and a link added by DR-KNOW / iq-2k Information Services - roughly 650 videos have indexed for this series