File:Gold dust (placer gold) 1 (16851203639).jpg

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Gold dust (placer gold) (DRA 101.1, Draper Museum of Natural History, Cody, Wyoming, USA)

A mineral is a naturally-occurring, solid, inorganic, crystalline substrance having a fairly definite chemical composition and having fairly definite physical properties. At its simplest, a mineral is a naturally-occurring solid chemical. Currently, there are over 4900 named and described minerals - about 200 of them are common and about 20 of them are very common. Mineral classification is based on anion chemistry. Major categories of minerals are: elements, sulfides, oxides, halides, carbonates, sulfates, phosphates, and silicates.

Elements are fundamental substances of matter - matter that is composed of the same types of atoms. At present, 118 elements are known (four of them are still unnamed). Of these, 98 occur naturally on Earth (hydrogen to californium). Most of these occur in rocks & minerals, although some occur in very small, trace amounts. Only some elements occur in their native elemental state as minerals.

To find a native element in nature, it must be relatively non-reactive and there must be some concentration process. Metallic, semimetallic (metalloid), and nonmetallic elements are known in their native state as minerals.

Gold (Au) is the most prestigious metal known, but it's not the most valuable. Gold is the only metal that has a deep, rich, metallic yellow color. Almost all other metals are silvery-colored. Gold is very rare in crustal rocks - it averages about 5 ppb (parts per billion). Where gold has been concentrated, it occurs as wires, dendritic crystals, twisted sheets, octahedral crystals, and variably-shaped nuggets. It most commonly occurs in hydrothermal quartz veins, disseminated in some contact- & hydrothermal-metamorphic rocks, and in placer deposits. Placers are concentrations of heavy minerals in stream gravels or in cracks on bedrock-floored streams. Gold has a high specific gravity (about 19), so it easily accumulates in placer deposits. Its high density allows prospectors to readily collect placer gold by panning.

In addition to its high density, gold has a high melting point (over 1000º C). Gold is also relatively soft - about 2.5 to 3 on the Mohs Hardness Scale. The use of pure gold or high-purity gold in jewelry is not desirable as it easily gets scratched. The addition of other metals to gold to increase the hardness also alters the unique color of gold. Gold jewelry made & sold in America doesn’t have the gorgeous rich color of high-purity gold.

The gold dust shown above is placer gold, derived from river or stream sediments. "Gold dust" essentially refers to very small gold nuggets.

The provenance of this gold dust is not disclosed on public signage at the museum. However, I suspect it might be from California. The donor of this gold dust is the eccentric millionaire Forrest Fenn, who famously buried a treasure chest in the New Mexico Rocky Mountains. The chest contains a jar of gold dust that he says was from California's mid-1800s gold rush. The gold dust shown above may be a subsample of that material.
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Source Gold dust (placer gold) 1
Author James St. John

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This image was originally posted to Flickr by jsj1771 at https://www.flickr.com/photos/47445767@N05/16851203639. It was reviewed on 6 April 2015 by FlickreviewR and was confirmed to be licensed under the terms of the cc-by-2.0.

6 April 2015

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current20:36, 6 April 2015Thumbnail for version as of 20:36, 6 April 20153,272 × 2,796 (3.7 MB)Jacopo Werther (talk | contribs)Transferred from Flickr via Flickr2Commons

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