It's midnight here in Arizona. I was itching to do some prospecting up on Wade Creek in the Fortymile.

I launched Google Earth. It loaded and took me to my starting location, Ophir. I flew 450 miles to Chicken. Right now, it's Friday night, 10:00 PM in Chicken. I checked the weather. It's cloudy and -11 degrees F.
I estimated from my prior work in the Fortymile that line L11350 would cross Wade Creek about where I wanted to prospect. I plotted the two ends of the survey line on Google Earth and, yes it was right where I wanted to take a peek!
I copied and pasted the EM data into Microsoft Excel and calculated the "Metal Detector" signal for the almost 10,000 stations along the survey line. I found about half a dozen good looking hits. I began plotting the hits at their respective coordinates running north from *(edited:) Liberty Creek up across Wade Creek almost to the Fortymile River.
At station 7918 there is an interesting anomaly. I plotted the coordinates of the anomaly. The anomaly is 3978 feet long and crosses Gilliland Creek. Gilliland Creek drains into upper Wade Creek.
I went on Caltopo to plot the extent of the anomaly on a topo map. I created a pdf downloaded from Caltopo and uploaded it to my website.
Here's a link to the map: http://www.alaska-gold.com/fortymile/L11350_7918.pdf
I went to Alaska Mapper to get a view of the mining claim status and downloaded a map and uploaded the map to my website.
Here's a link to the mapper topo map: http://www.alaska-gold.com/fortymile/L1 ... r_topo.pdf
It took about half an hour to fly up to Chicken, plot out the survey data, make a discovery and publish the results.
Happy New Year!

- Geowizard