Remote Prospecting?

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Geowizard
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Re: Remote Prospecting?

Post by Geowizard » Tue Dec 22, 2020 8:24 pm

Chicken;

We are on our way to Chicken, Alaska. I checked out the airport.

https://skyvector.com/airport/CKX/Chicken-Airport

We land and jump out of the airplane...

Our Helicopter is warmed up, we hand the pilot a list of GPS coordinates.

We throw in some stakes and paperwork and we're on our way.

Hang on, there's more! :)

- Geowizard
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Re: Remote Prospecting?

Post by Geowizard » Wed Dec 23, 2020 3:55 pm

Fortymile project;


Surveys can be found on the website. Surveys have been conducted for most of the mining districts. A link to the project report download can be found. Other Links to downloads for all of the documents related to the survey as well as recompiled updates can be found.

Remote prospectors must be willing to spend time beforehand; :o

Over the course of several years, I spent hundreds of hours going from one survey line to the next looking at data that was compiled. The survey shows almost different parameters that were measured. The survey began on the western side of the survey area. Survey lines were flown from north to south in alternating directions progressing toward the east. The helicopter flies at an average speed of around 90 miles per hour. That's a speed of about 120 feet per second. Measurements are made at a rate of 10 per second. That means data is acquired every 12 feet along the flight line. Occasionally, flight lines are reflown.

The points where data is acquired are called "stations". The stations are numbered from 0 to the end of the flight line. When I refer to hits, I will reference the flight line and the station on that flight line.

I often plot hits based on a Datum called WGS-84. The survey was flown using a datum called NAD-27. That creates an error in location of 100 to 500 feet. I also use an online mapping service. The hits can be plotted using the same Datum (NAD-27) as used in the survey. The exact location of hits probably is not critical. That's because a "deposit" is large.

When Remote Prospectors are using GPS for locating hits, it's important to know what the Datum is and set up the GPS receiver for the same Datum.

Armed with a GPS receiver, properly setup, prospectors can navigate their way to hits.

So, stick around! :)

- Geowizard
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Re: Remote Prospecting?

Post by Geowizard » Thu Dec 24, 2020 5:55 pm

Hits;

There's a hit on Wilson Creek. :o

The hit has a quality between copper and GOLD. It may be GOLD with iron.

Note it is actually located in an area closed to mining, but... There was a mining claim that was excluded from the mineral order at the time the mineral order was established. It is only a short distance from the deposit and may include part of the deposit.

Close to the highway, close to food! :)

- Geowizard
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Re: Remote Prospecting?

Post by Geowizard » Thu Dec 24, 2020 6:28 pm

I forgot to say;

"Wait, there's more"! :o

North of the Taylor Highway, there's another hit.

Well lookie here!

It's outside of the eastern border, inside of the Scenic Mosquito Fork withdrawal. This tributary shows dredge tailing piles... The dredge tailing piles extend into the presently open for location. The survey was conducted after the tailings were made from dredging... and whatever the dredgers "left behind". This may not be tailings and maybe is just simply a raw creek bed with something interesting buried in it.

Update: Upon further inspection, there are apparently no tailings. There is a trail that runs up this creek. A parking area - maybe a roadside sand and gravel yard on the highway.

Stick around, there's more! :)

- Geowizard
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Re: Remote Prospecting?

Post by Geowizard » Thu Dec 24, 2020 7:22 pm

Ingle Creek;

One of the major attractions in the Fortymile is Ingle Creek and the Ingle Creek mine.

A survey line crosses the Ingle Creek mine. :o

Is there a Hit?

Yep... The highest quality.

This is an example of direct "correlation" of an anomaly with an existing mining operation. If anomalies correlate with existing mining operations, it's a high probability the anomalies correlate with FUTURE mining operations.

Wait, there's one more! :)

- Geowizard
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Re: Remote Prospecting?

Post by Geowizard » Thu Dec 24, 2020 8:05 pm

Here's the last anomaly;

This deposit is located on Buckskin Creek.

Note this exact location is presently covered with a mining claim. Note also, an ore deposit is centered along a north-south line. The inferred deposit runs north to south. GOLD and other minerals/metals erode from a deposit creating a halo around the deposit.

Happy Holidays and happy prospecting! :)

- Geowizard
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Re: Remote Prospecting?

Post by Jim_Alaska » Fri Dec 25, 2020 1:02 am

Great information Chuck, sure to help someone. This kind of "walk through" is just what is needed by some who have never been exposed to this kind of prospecting, where it is something that can be researched at home.
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Re: Remote Prospecting?

Post by Geowizard » Sun Dec 27, 2020 2:25 pm

Jim,

My personal opinion is;

Prospecting as we knew it is over. The World has been prospected and prospected repeatedly. Prospectors today have to face the reality that prospectors have walked and poked around on every square inch of possible prospectable ground there is. Go look again? Maybe they missed something? Do you feel lucky?

Take the Fortymile for instance. Prospectors that live in and around the Fortymile prospect the district every year. There are prospectors from all over Alaska that prospect the Fortymile. Prospectors from Canada and the CONUS. Prospectors visit from all over the World. Prospectors have prospected up and down all of the Rivers Creeks and tributaries for the past hundred years. There were prospectors that preceded them.

There's only ONE remaining possible way to prospect. The only remaining ground to be prospected is ground that has not been seen and cannot be seen with our eyes. That requires prospectors to use new tools and develop new skills to look INTO the earth.

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Re: Remote Prospecting?

Post by Geowizard » Sun Dec 27, 2020 4:58 pm

Selling something you can't see;

The problem with geophysical exploration is selling the product!

Oil wells have been drilled on geologic structures that represent known "traps" for oil. The science of using seismic methods to identify traps has been used for most of the past century all over the world. Most of the known resources have been identified. There were even exploration programs conducted by Exxon and Phillips petroleum in Arizona.

Oil is found in geologic formations that are known to contain hydrocarbons. Early oil deposits were found by observation of "seeps" on the ground. Those deposits represented the shallow sources that were developed in Pennsylvania and Ohio, in the United States. Seismic methods were needed to continue looking at deeper sources. It didn't take long to explore the Eastern States. Deeper sources of oil were discovered in Texas and Oklahoma. The seismic method grew with advances in technology. Computers were bulky in the early days. The speed and capacity to store more data allowed exploration to grow and improve. Gold prospecting isn't about oil but the subject follows the same pattern with the events in history. The easy, obvious, shallow deposits were discovered and developed first. Next, the deeper, more difficult deposits were discovered and developed.

Twenty years ago, after the North slope oil in Alaska was developed, the State of Alaska in recognizing their oil resources were in fact "finite" initiated a program.

That's why millions of dollars were expended on the surveys we have today. :)

- Geowizard
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Re: Remote Prospecting?

Post by Geowizard » Mon Dec 28, 2020 6:36 pm

The "Geo" part;

What do Erratics, and Late Cretaceous - Early Tertiary faults have to do with GOLD prospecting?

It's just been released and this video tops the "must see" list!

Watch this and find out why! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H476c8UjLXY

- Geowizard
Last edited by Geowizard on Sat Nov 26, 2022 1:11 am, edited 1 time in total.
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