Went to do sampling and a bit of exploration on the gold lease at Clermont qld Australia and had a cracker of 2 days digging. We found a potential reef and a heap of good looking ore has been sent away for testing
Iv noticed when sluicing and high banking that birds are more active on the area looking for grubs ect from the vegetation being turned over. Fish to like it.
The Ore I found, 2 tablespoons crushed ore = 5+ grams of Raw Crystal(Flower) Gold. It's ridiculous. Plus the rest of the minerals, Silver, Iron, sulfides, and sometimes copper. The ore has the same color but when fresh looks like dark granite. Oxidized, it starts decomposing releasing the fine gold and other minerals. 90% of the time you'll need a magnifying glass to see the fine metal crystals in the ore. That's where Gold comes from. Most are looking for the wash-off/secondary deposits from the original deposits.
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@@bedrockbrothers7119 I have a head-sized Gold Opal embedded with Sapphires. Keep looking. I'd go uphill and check and mounds nearby or on hilltops. check the old water flows and follow them upstream. Inside of water bend is where the heavies deposit. Most don't understand what happened to Earth, Put it this way. Lots of rock melted and reset slapping against hills and mountains. Round top mountains are actually hot mudflows. When you work that out you find it.
Actual opal is found in the same location as Gold and iron flows. Eventually, the gold and Iron are replaced by lighter minerals making them more transparent. Most go for those opals, not the Actual opal as it was originally formed they are extremely rare and a small piece, if it has awesome color, can go for up to 45k.
Actual Opal when polished has Actual Gold and iron sheen on the polished stone. If it has no Gold or Iron it is a secondary Opal and more common. Check for a lighter-colored yellow/orange band nearby it may have some rare opals.