Upper left
Leaching out of rock cracks
Where's The Gold? Mar/Apr 2025

Where's the Gold? from the Mar/Apr 2025 issue of Gold Prospectors Magazine
By: Kevin Hoagland
This is going to be yet another tough one. No multiple-choice answers, this is all about visualizing the area and thinking about gold and gravity.
Some 30 years ago I met an assayer in Congress who when he wasn’t assaying, he was out with his Gold Bug looking for pocket gold deposits. We made a couple of trips out looking at spots and detecting the ones that made sense to both of us; this is one of those spots.
This area is known for stringer veins with gold ranging from 100mesh to the occasional nuggets up to 1/4 ozt., all found in small pockets, making it not commercially viable but a great spot to get on the gold if you could read the clues.
Remember that mining in the day was opportunistic — grab the best and move on in most of the areas around this location. The miners left a lot of gold that they never knew was there or they just didn’t care about small deposits.
Study the photo hard before making a choice, and once you do, stick with it. You got this as long as you don’t over-think the area. Remember that gold loves gravity— that is the most important thing to remember. Think of Occam’s razor, a principle that says that if you have two or more competing ideas to explain the same question, the simpler answer is usually the correct one.
Answer:
If your eyes were drawn to the simplest answer, the depression where anything that can move will move into the spot, then you are ready for anything and you can find gold where others struggle. The big keys here are exactly the two hints I put into the question: Gold loves gravity and Occam's razor, the simplest answer is usually correct.
Congrats to Walt Mcquatters. Your comment was randomly selected to win this Gold Rush Nugget Bucket!

Look for the answer in the March April issue of Gold Prospectors Magazine, hitting mailboxes beginning March 1, 2025.
Not a subscriber? Click here to get this issue free (must subscribe by 8 p.m. PST 2/14/25)

Upper right, closer to the bend along the roots.
Lower left, as you can tell the water still flows there as the bishes are the brightest and fullest green.
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