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Gold-bearing areas in the Eastern U.S.
Name a state and I'll provide a list of counties and more specific locations if I know them, where colors have historically been found. If they've been found there in the past, there is still gold there today: guaranteed!
You don't need much to get started: a good (not too heavy) long handled shovel, a 3 or 5-gallon plastic pail, and a $10.00 gold pan. You can get pans for as little as $4.00 but I would discourage anybody from doing so. They are too flimsy and don't have a good riffle system of gold traps. |
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These are from a WORD document...hope there isn't too much computer gobbly-gook language & symbols when they wrap around to post. And hope this helps you and yours. Alabama: Counties of Chilton, Clay, Cleburne, Coosa, Elmore, Randolph, Tallapoosa, and Talledega. Prospect streams in the Clanton area. Georgia: Counties of Barrow, Cherokee, Cobb, Coweta, Dawson, Douglas, Elberta, Forsyth, Fulton, Gilmer, Gwinnett, Habersham, Hall, Haralson, Hart, Henry, Lincoln, Lumpkin, Madison, McDuffie, Meriweather, Newton, Oglethorpe, Paulding, Rabun, Towns, Union, Walton, Warren, White, and Wilkes. |
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If you could I'd like to know about Missouri.
Thanks E-A |
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Hows about eastern TN?
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Missouri: Counties of Adair (watch for diamonds), Chariton, Linn, Livingston, Macon, Putnam, Randolph, and Schuyler. Gold most often recovered in Missouri is sized fine to flour. Glacial movement from the area that is now called Iowa deposited these colors.
Tennessee: Counties of Blount, Monroe, and Polk. Along the TN/NC state line. |
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how about new hampshire
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New Hampshire: Prospect the following waterways and their tributaries: Carroll County: Ellis and Swift Rivers; Cheshire County Ashuelot River, Coos County: Dead Diamond and Swift Diamond Rivers, and Clear, Indian, and Perry Streams; Grafton County: Ammonoosuc, Wild Ammonoosuc, Mad, Upper Mad, Salmon, Baker, Gale, and Bebee Rivers; Sullivan: Cold River. Also be sure to sample along the Connecticut River and its tributaries. Many stream and bench gravels are good panning prospects, particularly in the northern and western parts of the state, and waterways that drain eastern slopes.
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Tennessee
I'm a mile away from Blount... Worth panning my 3 streams? |
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All of the TN gold I know about is located along a NE/SW line adjacent to the NC state line. A guy never knows about a creek until he prospects it.
Good luck...and if you find any nuggets I need to know where you're diggin! Sample spots where flood currents would have been slowed so colors could fall out and deposit. Try the inside of bends, downstream side of boulders, cracks in bedrock, upper end of gravel bars. Bigger colors will always be deeper. Look for black sands. These are actually brown iron ores and oxides that when wet look black. A stream that contains black sands may also contain gold. Very seldom will any gold be found in an area that does not contain black sands. |
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Thanks. Next time your up this way... We can take a walk...
I'll bring lunch and snax, you keep what we find and then I'll know what to look for |
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How about Nevada, not the casinos...
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Is there any in Ohio?
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Nevada I can't help you much with. Am sorry but have never prospected there. You might want to pull up the Gold Prospectors of America (GPAA) web sight, click on forum and post your question there. I'm sure there are hundreds of folks who can help you regarding locations in NV and other western states.
Ohio = "Round on each end and hi in the middle"....Ah..........Big-Ten Country. I'm a Buckeye from the top of my head to the tip of my toes though haven't been back there in a number of years. My dad was a prof. at OSU and my mom was a geologist. I cheer for ANYONE who plays Michigan! There's some pretty good gold in Ohio. Several glaciers brought millions upon millions of tons of surface materials including gold, down from the north and created what are called "morains" (glacial drifts which are materials that piled up either under the glacial or in front of it, and were left as the temps warmed causing the glacier to receed). The best thing to do is to pull up a geological glacial map to find out where these "drifts" are located. Then work the waterways that cut through them. Glacial gold is scattered...it's very hard to find concentrated deposits except in waterways that over the years have eroded away drift materials and concentrated them in the stream. I found some pretty nice nuggets when I was a kid, and have seen a number that were bigger then the ones I found. Just remember that because gold is so comparatively heavy, a "nugget" (a color that won't pass through a 10-mesh screen = 10 holes per linear inch; most window screen is about 18-19 mesh) will seldom ever be moved by flood waters, more than 1500 feet from the point that it erodes (from the banks or ground where it has been deposited for eons) into a stream. In the Buckeye state gold can be found in small quantities virtually throughout the glaciated two-thirds of Ohio. This is because glacier gold tends to be scattered rather then deposited in significant concentrations. During the 1800�s and early 1900�s there were commercial gold mining efforts in both Clermont and Richland Counties, and in several areas in the north-central part of the state. Colors are also readily found in the Scioto River as far south as Portsmouth. Gold has been found in the counties of Adams, Ashland, Bellmont, Brown, Butler, Carroll: Stanley Creek; Clermont: Stonelick Creek; Columbiana, Cuyahoga, Fayette, Franklin, Gallia, Green, Guernsey, Highland, Hocking, Huron, Knox, Licking, Mahoning: Middle Fork of Little Beaver Creek; Montgomery, Morgan, Richland: Deadman�s Run; Ross: Buckskin and Paint Creeks; Seneca, Warren, and Wayne. Good hunting; "may you and yours always find colors in your pan". |
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Indiana? It would probably be a similar story to Ohio.
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Anything in the southeastern area? Particularly Bucks County? Thanks and have a great day!
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Yes, Indiana gold is glacial like Ohio's...it was brought down from the north. Check the streams that cut through moraines in the counties of Brown: most all streams; Carroll, Cass, Clark, Clinton, Deerborn, Franklin, Green, Harrison, Henry, Jackson, Jefferson, Jennings, Knox, Monroe, Montgomery, Morgan: most all streams; Ohio, Owen, Pike, Putnam, Sullivan, Vanderburg, Vermillion, Warren, and Wayne. Most streams in the Counties of central and north Indiana contain colors and load specimens have been reported in the northeast part of the state. Additionally prospect the many tributaries of the Wabash River, and with a permit, in the Morgan-Monroe State Forest.
In all glacial country as reported above, "load specimens" can be found. These are pieces of quartz which have included gold because the gold has not yet been freed by nature. A "load" is the vein in which solidified gold was formed. The quartz vein (origin of gold) is what the old-timers called "the mother load". There isn't much gold down in the southern part of the state that I know about...but who knows? Prospect the creeks...check your pan for black sands and then gold. If no black sands are present in the watershed, then it is likely that there is no gold either, but....ah, the "chase!". Prospectors have a lot of sayings that are important. One of them is "Gold is where you find it". The statement sounds facetious but it isn't; it's serious. How land and waterways exist today is NOT how they existed hundreds to thousands of millions of years ago....so gold may have located most anywhere in glacial and mineralized geographic areas. A couple of examples: The main rivers in PA used to all flow north; all the rivers in the Appalachian region used to flow west. Much of the sands in the Grand Canyon originated in the Appalachian region in the eastern U.S. |
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Silver Jeep:
There was a book published by Over Mountain Press ( still in JC ) called "Silver in the Unakas".....which are the mountain in Carter County near you. Interesting book about a fabled silver mine that is supposed to lie in those mountains. Fellow named Jonathan Swift supposely worked it and even minted his own silver dollars at one time. Was brought up on counterfeiting charges, which were dismissed when it was shown his 'dollar' contained more silver than the US Mint was putting in theirs....ahahahahaaa |
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Anything in New York?
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Thanks for the offer Goldminer. I spend a lot of time in the state of Maine and was wondering if you had any info on that state? And is Rhode Island a stretch?
Also. I was wondering if you thought there might be any Ag content in beach sand. It seems to me that glacial grinding would produce sand that contained a cross-sampling of all minerals, metals and rock types. And if there were any AG content in sand, do you think it could be extracted in any way? Might the Ag particles sift to the bottom of a panful of sand if sufficiently shaken? Appreciate any and all input Goldminer! |
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I'll post these states but then am leaving to do a workshop in VA. Won't be back until Friday evening...good Lord willing.
In Wisconsin, gold has been found in the waterways in the counties of Ashland, Bayfield, Clark, Dane, Douglas, Dunn, Eau Claire, Forest, Iron, Lafayette, Kenosha, Marathon, Marinette, Onieda, Pierce, Polk, Rusk, and Taylor.Fine and flour colors can probably be found in placers in any county. Glacial sediments contain amounts of gold and most streams have glacial sediment. Diamonds have been found along Plum Creek in Pierce County and may exist elsewhere in that area. In New York gold can be recovered in the waterways that draine the Adirondack and Catskill Mountain Regions. Load gold (hard rock quartz veins) have also been found in NY. Maine stream and bench gravels (a "bench" is an old stream bed located above a current stream if it still exists, where the waterway changed course and erroded in another direction leaving the old bed high and dry...look for rounded waterborne [alluvial] gravels and rocks) are good panning prospects, particularly in the waterways that drain the eastern slopes: Counties of Aroostook, Cumberland, Franklin, Hancock, Kennebeck, Knox, Oxford, Penobscot, Somerset, Waldo, and Washington. In Rhode Island, the only gold I know about is in the streams in Providence County. Hope this helps 'ya-all. Have a great week! |
Re: Gold-bearing areas in the Eastern U.S.
notheast PA?
plenty of black gold (coal) here |
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QWAK,How about an extreamly rich SILVER mine that has been lost since the around 1900? HUMmmmmm??
Ware I live is out in the boonies but it has a very long history going back to the native americans who concidered this a sacrid place. Befor the European settlers came in THEY had a SILVER mine that had/has ore so rich it could be smelted with primitive tecniques. Once the naitives were killed or run off or died from diseases, the mine was taken over and remained in production untill late in the CIVAL WAR when it was hidden because the SOUTH was losing and they did not want the YANKIES to get it. After the cival war the family who owned the mine got involved with an OUT LAW GANG that ROBED the Butterfield stage line (my cabin is on a road that was part of the Butterfield stage line road). One of the roberies got the out laws somthing very special ---- a set of DIES for US SILVER DOLLARS that was being sent to the Denver mint. The out laws were no fools and with a sorce for SILVER they began MINTING counterfit US SILVER DOLLARS with a higher SILVER content than the official US SILVER DOLLARS! :) This continued for many years untill they got word that the SECRET SERVICE was closing in on them. A map was made and the entrence to the mine blown up to hide it. All gang members split up agreeing to return years later once things had cooled down. When the alloted time had passed at the reunion things got UGLY and very violent several got dead and the map disapeared! Today there are many decendents of the family that owned the mine still in the aeria,they are generly poor but every time some one like my self buys land and discovers an old well on their land one of the members of the family will show up to see if the LOST SILVER MINE has been found! I found an old covered over and filled in well next to my cabin and THAT is how I heard this story! My question is WHAT should a person look for as indications that mining HAD gone on in the passed? Also what sort of rock formations would be an indication that SILVER could posably be found! Got to admit it would be way beyond COOL to find out that this rockey land I bought turned out to have a old SILVER MINE on it!:ARMS1: :albertein As far as I have been able to find out this is a 100% TRUE story and I have seen old news paper clipimgs that have mentioned this OUT LAW GANG in this aeria! BTW: I have been contacted twice in the last year by a company that wants to DRILL for OIL and GAS and others have accepted the pittly amounts they were offering which for my 40 achers was about $300.00 and I told them what is under and on MY LAND belongs to ME and in the future can only become MORE VALUABLE so thanks but NO THANKS!:albertein the DUCK |
Re: Gold-bearing areas in the Eastern U.S.
samwheat,
In PA gold has been found in the Counties of Adams, Bucks, Chester, Lancaster, Lebanon, Montgomery, Susquehanna, Tioga, Wyoming, and York. Prospect the Susquehanna River and its tributaries, and all the glacial streams that flow in northeast and northwest. Gold has been found mostly in the mountainous area. Expect to find small nuggets on occasion but primarily medium, fine, and flour colors. Sample the Tuckhannock River and tributary creeks that run southwest through Susquehanna and Wyoming Counties, and the northern Northampton and southern Monroe County areas. Also prospect the waterways aroundWyalusing, New Albany, White Haven, Harrisburg, Reading, Knuckle Town, Sweden Valley, Noxen, and southeast of Hanover. Noteworthy is the fact that Geologists report that prior to the last ice age, the Allegheny and Monongahela Rivers instead of joining to form the Ohio River running south, flowed independently in a northern direction and drained into Lake Erie. Also noteworthy is that the most notable significant glacial features in Pennsylvania are the moraines that stretch on a jagged line from near Sayre on the New York state line, southeast to a point just south of Stroudsburg on the New Jersey line. GOLD DUCK, I have never prospected or mined for silver so I can't help you much with Ag except to say that I did fine a few nuggets in MI a few years ago. By far most gold was formed in microscopic particles, but also in visible gold. And while gold nuggets are rare (there are more diamonds found than gold nuggets) silver nuggets and other visible silver particles are by far more rare. This is because virtually all silver was formed in microscopic particles that are located in large mineralized zones and in hard rock ("ore"). What this means for the average prospector is that unlike gold, it's nearly impossible to "pan" or otherwise recover silver because you can't see the particles. Subsequently all silver mining is done in commericial operations which is VERY expensive prospecting and mining, and thus beyond most of us. Too, 90% of silver is mined as a bi-product in gold, lead, copper, and zinc mining operations rather than as a primary metal. |
Re: Gold-bearing areas in the Eastern U.S.
QWAK,goldminer,The Well I found next to my cabin was in solid rock! I live on a mountan ridge and there is only about 18" of dirt more rocks than dirt and it is RED sand stone and the water has incredable amount of Iron in it.
There is also gray shale rock I know was mentioned when thet doug or blasted a highway tonnel a fiew years back. The well was about 6' in diamiter and I cleard it out about 20' down and it was narrowing at that point. Some one at some time did a whole lot of work to make THAT whole in the ground! I wore out several hammer drill bits trying to drill holes in it. It is a lot harder than I thought sand stone would be! Basicly I have cleared off a 30' by 40' aeria down to the sand stone bed rock and it is my bath room/greenhouse aeria, sand stone peals off in layers but at about 2' down the layer is at least 3' thick! It is my understanding that the COMSTOCK SILVER LOAD started as a failing GOLD mining operation and some one tested a blue/gray mud muck that was cloging every thing up and found almost accidently a RICH SILVER LOAD! I don't have a clue what I should look for as an indication of an old mining operation or what SILVER ore would look like. the DUCK |
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Incidentally, that's where I picked up the 4 sterling knives for a buck. I love this area. |
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How about California?
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HAHAHAHAHA, I just realized that the thread title says "Eastern U.S." my bad. I guess I kind of ignored that and read the first sentence of the post, which said:
Name a state and I'll provide a list of counties and more specific locations |
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