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Perhaps we could talk about gold and silver. Do you scorn these things, take an interest, or invest at all. Have you ever panned for gold.
Wax lyrical, but truthfully, if you can.
eC':-Ç
It has come a long way since October. Now they are talking 2 million ounces, and hope to go still further. The step outs into Razor and Varley areas are now starting to develop some reality. The intervening 6.5 miles of ground has not yet been proved or disproved, but is seems like there will be some lenses at the very least within that package that will be creditable.
EC':-Ç
We tried strapping on our electromagnetic gyratory, positive impulse, transient probe onto a Bell 212, but is was too large and the helicopter could not take off. We did manage to get a scaled down version onto an A-Star, and the demo model did start a riot when it flew over the Radcliffe dorm.
When you say La Bufa might be a Virgen, is that what La Bufa says or did you get a second opinion. Where does La Bufa hang out when she is at home.
EC':-Ç
I had heard that God and the Virgin Mary were just good friends. I think that is a scurrilous rumour.
Yes there are very large virgins. Some debate whether Mars has been around before. I think she is just a very shy and nice planet, but wants to get it on with us.
So yes, there are very large orebodies that have never seen a drill. We hope to meet a few and perhaps one will lift up its skirts for us. Right now we are going out with divorced orebodies, but we may change our mind and start going out with virgins.
EC':-Ç
Time is in the physical world is a dimension of energy production. Einsteins equations and Lorentzs too, point to the fact that time is a vector quantity. It had to start to measure the change taking place in matter after the universe started.
It has a different dimension, (that cannot be measured), with the ever increasing entropy of the universe. In effect, it has the same property that matter does (1), in that it changes with the rate of decay of the universe. As the energy of the univere is dissipated, according to our present understanding of energy and matte, and according to the laws of thermodynamics, then time slows down. This can be shown by Lorentz transforms with regard to entropy. At the point of zero energy transfer from matter to space, then the equation of time stops, as it was stopped in the black hole that was the universe before it started to expand explosively about 5 billion present-earth-years ago. At that time, time was traveling much faster than it does today however, so years are an irrelevant measure.
As we know, in the parallel that was mentioned in (1), above, time slows down and mass increases as we approach the speed of light. In this way we can see that time and mass are elasic with speed, but we may not have realized that time is elastic with energy too. This must be so, as any measure of time, must use the same atoms so constrained by their energy content, and their entropic dissipation, to measure time. As their internal clock starts to beat more slowly, so does time, until, when all molecules are frozen, so is time.
This raises certain questions. What happens to the dissipating energy, and is energy, although massless, able to somehow congeal through black holes or other vortices of capture, into matter again. Is gravity sufficient although tiny, to be able to recapture the universe and make it recycle its frozen matter into one giant co-alescence no matter how far flung matter is. Some say that the universe expands forever. But I say it is open to question.
As well, the possibility that mass and matter are in fact just a property of energy vortices, so to speak, is another possibility. This is supported by the complete annihiliation of matter into light and other spectrum energy seemingly by its great speed and frewquency to be devoid of mass. But if speed and frequency creates impact, but such high speed particles calculate to zero mass, or thereabouts, then perhaps the Einsteinian equations are just pointing to the absolute equivalence of matter-mass and energy. What we would be looking at with matter would be a congealed energy space, due to special conditions of energy wavicles of certain geometries. The energy of formation of the energy vortex is what creates the geometry of certain elements of matter.
EC':-Ç
What is the biggest virgin silver play on the board?
That is not going into court to deterimine ownership?
EC<:-}
Cat got your tangled tongue? I hope it is not the dreaded spotted black panther. If so, you will be forever lion!
Tell me tales of orebodies of woe -- that you have sank your life savings into only to find that the trail of the promoter leads on forever.
EC<:-}
If you are a souless blood sucking Zombie, like the people corporate America seems to promote to positions of their seeming incompetence (who are they trying to kid? .. competence at thievery is not being excelled) -- the cost of buying now and paying later with thy soul is no never mind.. you beat de dEbIl, cause you ain't got no soul!
EC<:-}
So you are saying that your lack of ability to talk and run means you are related caudaly to the Desert Doug Beetle? I mean Doung Beetle, that lovable little basal tetrapod responsible for getting its shit together everywhere.
I do see a constant flow. This is an exercise. At the right site it does induce cardiac and pulmonary rate increase. Some people tend to complain about rate increases. To further the hypothesis in a predictive way, you are also insinuating if I am correct that the ability to keep one's cool during these exercise means one is lizard like?
I always thought some folks had taken a different evolutionary path, possibly from a whole other source. The phrase "cannot walk and chew gum at the same time" takes on a whole other meaning. They are caudally related to a basal tetrapod. It's excusable.
If there an evolutionary cause that can be seen in the Animal Kingdom that explains why some people like to acquire things readily and why money seems to stick to some people's fingers?
EC<:-}
Now you and I know that common sense is dangerous.
Go on thinking hooey. Let them call you crazy. Let them be right.
Are they enjoying your insanity as much as you are?
Never.
That is the art of being annoying. The idea is not to care about it. Then get a hell of a kick out of it when others are annoyed. It's a hoot.
Make sure you can run faster than they can when they get the hot tar and bag of feathers out. Keep laughing. You may have to train some, as it hard to laugh and run fast at the same time, while dodging rocks.
EC<:-}
Keep on working
Blue paint is given its colour by Cobalt, or Iron, not copper.
Hence, Cobalt Blue.
Good green dyes where only discovered in modern times, from coal tar.
http://www.straw.com/sig/dyehist.html
http://www.quilthistory.com/dye.htm
E. Grumbacher
Which brings to mind the obvious question, what is magnetism and why does it only affect ferrous metals strongly?
And when you have solved what magnetism is, what is paramagnetism?
And onward to what is matter? Or what is it like?
Everybody thinks gravity should have waves, but nobody can detect them. What a bunch of fuddy-duddies!
EC<:-}
I have seen mountain lions in Northern Ontario. They are called Cougar here. The last encounters of any number were in the 1930's although there have been several sightings since the 1970's. It is known that they are coming back as there have been sightings in the Kenora and Red Lake area. They were once common all across middle Canada from BC to New Brunswick. For no apparent reason they seemed to die out except for BC, but in the past 25 years they have been making a comeback in many areas. Ordinarily cats are very shy, so they were never commonly seen anyway. The occasional sighting often goes unreported in Ontario. Feral Cats that are descended from house cats are known to exist in the bush, even in very cold Northern Ontario. Fairly common as well are wild dog packs. Wild dogs are more savage than wolves and will kill game for the sake of killing. There are some packs near Temagami.
I have seen Timberwolf often in Ontario and Northern Sasktachewan. They have mostly white or cream coloured fur, and the animal is larger than a German Sheperd. They show no fear of man, and will never run from beeing seen unless surprised headlong. Most wolf sightings from Toronto to Moosonee are brush wolf, cross fox, or fox-wolf cross, or coyote.
Truly rare sightings are Ivory Billed Woodpeckers, Eastern Cormorants and Eastern Cuckoos. The Red Wolf is now endangered in Ontario where it was once common in middle and Northern Ontario. Water snakes, once common in Southern Ontario (Water Moccasin) may be dying out because of river pollution in the St. Lawrence and related systems.
EC<:-}
Get out of that coppermine you fool! The roof is about to collapse!
EC<:-}
I need a bulletproof hat that is stuffed with money. The skull case is more or less a hat rack, as they don't seem to need my brain anywhere. :)
Spoke to Louis at the convo. Did not speak to half the people I wanted to get to. No time. Next year we are getting a booth and suite at the Intercon, but we can come out then.
Barker has minerals all over the place. It seems that BC is coming out of its doldrums in a way and people feel that maybe they can do a few things in mining. Of course Kemess, that old money pit did not dispel that, and it was built in a time of no investment, so perhaps BC needs revisiting.
Exploration is tough. It ain't easy to find orebodies. Of course it is tougher still to get the money to afford to look for 'em.
EC<:-}
Computer usefullness in keeping track of data has not advanced much since the Model II. The best operating system Tandy ever had was the Model 16 Xenix. I knew a Dentist who operated with one until about last year. Served his clients fine, never missed a filling.
All my Linux and Windows 9blech computerz and I have never found a good contact management system. I used something that came with Eudora pro, and some PC File thingie, and my emailer, either Eudora or Pine for the longest. But decent database stuff is hard to find. I find PDA's adbominable as data entry is painful, hot syncing is bad stuff, really, as you have no simple control. It is not really a good tool. Lotus Notes is bad. Access is a big stodgy nightmare that mates with nothing. What is needed is something that works with ascii text files tab or space delimited. Really, probably Excel is better than most. It should be able to print addresses/names/email addresses, fax people, phone people, email lists or individuals any file, sort on all kinds of fields, print out one line lists, have multiple master lists and do backup.
My old XT with a 30 meg drive and DOS 5.0 used to get as much work done for me as my windows machine. When I went 33.6 on the modem (remember Wildcat Bulletin Board Shareware?) with a Windows 3.11 machine my ability to fax people and contact people with a computer was as good as it is today. And downloading data off Bell I-Net and searching newspaper articles at 2400 baud got good useful references faster than the net does today. Fax management was better by XT with Windows 3.11 software than any stuff I have seen recently. Only problem was the fax machines of the day would not respond to the old USR 33.6 machine. And forget receiving faxes. That only worked a certain per cent of the time which is worse than useless.
EC<:-}
I would estimate the way we are saving money, 12 cents an ounce would be more like it. Let's face it, if you don't mine, the gold is really cheap. When we get really would up and start splurging on serious stuff like drills, fans, piping, pumps, timber, alimaks, exorbitant salaries, etc... we should be able to hold costs down to a dull roar still. It all depends on how cheap we can do it. Engineering gold is pinching pennies until the scream, and then putting them through the roller to see how far they will flatten out. Hemlo mines gold ore for 60 dollars a ton, but I figure they are high overhead. I think eventually we can do it for less. To start I believe it will cost us 80 dollars per ton CDN all up to get ore out of the ground and to the mill. Milling at first will cost us a fixed 40 dollars per ton. Eventually we will be able to bring that down to about 15 dollars per ton in a couple of years. But even at 120 dollars per ton, we are aiming at 360 dollars CDN per ounce. That is still 176 dollars an ounce profit. Today CDN gold mines work at from 5 tons per man day to even 10 tons per man day. At the old Louanna Mine in 1980 we used to mine and mill 300 tons per day with a complete staff of between 30 and 60 men. And we were doing shrinkage stoping the old hard way. With a more automated approach, we could do better than that, and certainly no worse. Even at 5 tons per man day, The labour/support component is no worse than 200 CDN dollars per ounce here. If mining were 60 dollars/short ton for dynamite, bits, pumping, tramming, hoisting, timber, rock bolts, and support equipment on top of that, then we are looking at $380 CDN/ounce. That assumes a grade of .33 ounces per ton, something we believe is achievable.
In these kind of situations we won't know until we do it. Historical costs in many similar operations of this scale throughout Canada support doing it at those kind of figures.
EC<:-}
For a while now we have been saying that we are going to a "mineing company". Let me enlarge on that. A few people have been curious about exactly how we were going to go about that. Let's say you and I were walking along in a likely area, and we spy gold. I say "that's mine". That is how it works. That will be our main mineing method. What I see is mine, and what you see is mine too.
Would you mined coming mineing with us?
EC<:-}
I bain everee wair dude, I bain everee wair.
I bain to da lan of the tall tall mountains, and I been to zee crowded city wair everyone in mad rush. I bain to the hall of the mountain kings, wair gold was everee wair, and even to the lan'
of montie zooma. I am goin' to make zee mine where evair I res' my spade.
Nex big meetin is April, den may.
We is a goin' concern. We is goin' and we is concerned, and so is uderr folks, so I guess that fits gud.
EC<:-}
I was not rich enough to be a millenium scam artist, so I am splitting nickels with a hatchet in the year 2000 and beyond.
We have a low low budget company. Even when we are fully financed we will be running the company from an outhouse. And rationing paper at that. The company jet will be a paper airplane. Our company logo will be a happy face rubber stamp we found in a dumpster outside PS 152 in Capreol when they tore it down. Our company computer is a Tandy Radio Shack Model III. (Do you know where we can get a power line for one of those? Somebody ripped it out.) Our GPS is a boy scout compass with a carboard sign saying "You are Here". We have brand new company truck. Brand new to the dump where we found it. As soon as we get a set of tires and jack it off the blocks it will be the terror of the backwoods. We may even get it licensed.
We intend to mine gold. As much as we can steal.
EC<:-}
Gratuitous post to put board at top of list.
Conversation starters.
What do you think about China?
What do you think about Ontario?
What do you think about BC?
What do you think about Mexico?
New items in exploration nous pensons.
EC<:-}
I got a Barker Minerals hat at the PDA.
I have a feeling that it will become a collector's item, like the Pegasus Helicopter Hats of the 1970's.
EC<:-}
200 K and rising
e charters
gold wildcat shield inc corp ltd etc ad infinite development
Everything in the "shield", or just about everything, is pre-Cambrian.
That is probably why the call it the Pre-Cambrian Shield.
The Cambrian era starts at only 500 million years. This is classically the beginning of macroscopic life in the geologic time scale. It is now accepted that even the early proterozoic, extending from 1.8 billion to 1.1 billion years ago, had microscopic life such as may be recorded in algal stromatolites, and in the consolidated radiolarian ooze of ancient sediments. These soft bodied very ancient creatures were not preserved except as echoes of their former selves; metamorphosed, petrified ghosts in microscopic rock formations.
Two billion to 4 billion year old ore vents would later be host to bizarre life forms, which to this day occupy the unique ecological niche of living off these hot water vents. Underwater geysers, super saturated in metals, now lay their valuable sediment in nearby basins when their superheated fluids contact the cold ocean. The resultant ore deposits have been continually formed at the edge of colliding continental plates where the rocks becomes molten at depths between 15 and 100 kilometers.
Far before that, when the earth did not have oxygen in its atmosphere, and when the rock surfaces often would boil lead, the ancient vast ore deposits we mine today were formed on a sea bed supposedly barren of life. These deposits are called VMS, and Sedex. VMS stands for volcanigenic massive sulphide, and Sedex stands for sedimentary exhalative. Iron formations, both sulphidic and oxide, (the latter being called taconites), were formed in the same way; in shallow sea bays, a few miles from a volcano, laid down rhythmically by hot water vents. Most sulphide ore bodies formed as the result of metals precipitating out of hot water geysers, which were on the bottom of the ocean floor. The time they took to form may have only been 50,000 years. Special conditions of burial and uplift had to take place in order for them to be preserved for 3 billion years.
Nearly ever ore body mined in Canada was once laid down at the base of an island chain of exploding Volcanoes, from 3 billion to 1.1 billion years ago. When I say exploding, I mean that precisely. When these volcanoes got to a certain state, they plugged up with acid rock, and then they went bang in a most horrendous way. One in Kansas exploded and covered the surrounding 4 states with ash about 50 feet deep. The size of this explosion has been calculated as equal to a billion one megaton hydrogen bombs. Probably the resultant ash cloud covered the sky for a few thousand years, and caused many animal extinctions.
The ore bodies formed then were laid down flat. Nearly all of them today stand on their edge, indicating that the degree of compression and folding of the rocks since then borders on the catastrophic. Ore that was on the seabed at one time was raised up to a height of between 6,000 and 30,000 feet ASL, and then buried perhaps 1 to 5 miles below the surface. If New York City had been on the planet then, it would now be a silcate-iron-copper-aluminum ore body about 200 feet thick and 20 miles long, wrapped sinuously around a few east-west trending faults. We might see the odd remnant girder or traffic light.
God was only thinking about building man and chicks at the time. What he was busy with then was whipping up fancy mineral bodies for his later complex self-determining carbon based robot-beastie to use in innovative ways. Two thousand, 800 million years later man would come along, believing he was the key to the universe. Great events gone before him, for two thousand times longer than he has been around, should tell him that he is really of no consequence to the evolving planet. A proper sense to have in the study of geology is one of awe at the incredible history of the sphere, written out before us in the rocks. Once a mass of land was centered on the earth, then it split apart and it drifted and spun away into continents, spreading itself across the globe. As the earth cooled more life formed, and gradually grew to enormous size and complexity. The the planet cooled still further, and in the last .06% of its history, apes began to scratch their head and say "whuffo?" So here we are. Still cooling, and worried about getting warmer.
Although most of the rocks laid down then were complexly folded, some are still preserved near their original attitudes. I have seen the roots of ancient volcanic mountains still sitting on their bases. One such monster I observed had a base about 6 miles wide, but it was only about 200 feet high. At one time it was 15,000 feet high. Near its base was sign of copper, and felsic rocks. It has bever been drilled, and the odd conductor is about. The target is in between the rocks that gave birth to Kidd Creek and the Horne Mine some of the world's largest and richest ore-bodies.
Ever throughout time these zones of subduction and continential plate collision have been giving birth to orebodies. Later the ore is folded into the earth's crust, preserved by mountain building, and then moved inland as the plates continue their westward march.
At these folded-in, preserved volcanic-sedimentary horizons we prospect today, looking for the signs that we are in the same basin, fault, or age of a previously-found productive body. If we looked at the contemporary deposits and their heat engines, we would see what our target was clearly.
The ore has to have been deposited in basins once parallel to a coastline, and thence compressed and folded perhaps once from east-west pressure, and thence north-south. The source of the heat, volcanism, or the surface expression of the main rock vent does not have to be nearby the vent-source as was once thought.
150 miles from a contemporary explosive volcanic regime, (Mt. St. Helens) an orebody is forming today, 1500 metres beneath the Straits of Jaun de Fuca, fed by a hot water vent pregnant with copper. If one considered that Timmins was a volcanic centre of a certain age, then considering this modern scale, one would be quite comfortable exploring for related copper-zinc deposits from North Bay to Moosonee, and from Kapuskasing to
Val d'Or
-- ed ...
**********************
Kwestione 64 dollaramus -- Whuffo Worthington-Totten 1 and 2?
Date: Sat, 7 Feb 2004 08:48:24 -0800
To: E. Charters <echarters@sympatico.ca>
Subject: sudbury
"Hi;
Totten 2 is a mine of INCO's on care and maintenance. It is SW end? of the offset from Creighton.
Creighton, Gertrude, Lockerby, Aero-Kidd-Crowflight, Worthington,
Totten 1, Totten2 from NE toSW With Crean Hill a splay off this offset. All these offsets seem to be radial ore bearing fractures."
# what do you mean "seem to be radial ore etc.." Either they are or they aren't. Make up my mind.
"Around the N and E rim the ore seems to be in concencentric fractures.
Mialex appears to be the radial fracture from Murray mine, North
mine, South mine, Kelly Lake mine intersecting the concentric fracture of Makada Lake. The Murray fault runs through Lively and a radial fault runs from the Murray to Makada Lake which in turn has parrallel faults. The Grenville front collision no doubt produced other ore bearing fractures such as the Manchester, ESE of the basin."
-- Junior Bit Reamer (with # comments)
*******************
I hear yah reamer and I second that opinion -- (with a 13 no-trump sed theory)
I guess jeeallohgee is an imperfect art, not a deterministic science.
All these jeeallohgists going around trying to prove they are "right"! Kurt Godl could have told them that it is impossible to prove the rightness of a system of reasoning from within that system. So geology will never be "right". It can only validate its pre-set terms of reference. A good set of terms to start with is "this system is always right, even if it seems wrong". Such a frame of reference is religion. No religion tries to justify itself, which proves they already know what they are up against, unlike science. Religion is therefore more advanced logically than science.
******************
My geological religion believes that the ores of Studbury are hydrothermal as the gent who wrote the book on Studbury fully believed. Those at the rim of the basin are see bed sedimentary-exhalative or volcanigenic (Take your pick. They are the same process) and some of the rim and offset dike ones are vein hydrothermal injected, such as the Strathcona.
At the time, the 1948 observer said that the Studbury area was the largest area of phreatomagmatic (violently explosive) felsic volcanism in the world. He also stated that if the basin were to be magmatic, it would have to have been overturned. It is unlikely with its successions that it was, since younger rocks overlie older as you progress inwards to the center of the basin. The age of the norites is very near the presumed age of the ore, and the age of the felsic norite and the mafic norite is impossible to differentiate within the bounds of the error of the age determination. This, with the extremely fine grained nature of the two norites, is consistent with them both being flows that covered the ore just after it was exhalatively laid down in the emabyments along the basin rim it is nearly always found in.
This natural succession is much more compelling and consistent with the interior basin sedimentary processes and the later known volcanigenic copper-zinc in the interior of the basin, than the almost impossibly co-incidental and fortuitous deus ex machina of having the ore inject itself along a contact "plane of weakness" all along the rim as the magmatic theorists say.
The "plane of weakness" canard has some support in that the Whistle and Worthington offset dyke systems do control ore, and some veins do look dendritic in plan, offering the possibility of injection. Hydrothermal injection is just as powerful a possibility as magmatic, and it explains the extensive flow, and low temperature characteristics of the pendlandite much more persuasively than magmatic theories. In all fairness, contacts that are squeezed that may have gross differences in plasticity, such as felsic norite and the highly fractured sublayer sedimentary zone, do evince in many areas, preferred loci of injected deposition. You would expect with the highly fractured nature of the sublayer for it to be veritably flooded with intrusion. The fairly quiet nature of the sulphide encroachment onto the sublayer does not speak powerfully that it was intruded so violently by high pressure magmatics.
The whole magmatic theory ignores several important structural elements, invokes will nilly a huge unexplained fortuity of emplacement, and is very weak on how massive sulphide flows, or fractionates from its very low % silicated nature all at once in such a massive event. All over the world layered separated massive copper-nickel and copper-zinc has proven exhalative and volcanigenic origins in sea bed basin embayments, but Studbury has to the a hold-out on the very weak underpinning of geochemical grounds.
How so?
**************************************
That said, the Grenville and its long history may have much more to do with the Studbury basin than has previously been loudly said. Certainly the extreme deformation of its once towering mountain ranges (30,000 feet of more above their base or 2.5 times higher than Everest) -- must have had much to do with laying out permissive dilationary structures in the basin. What lies outside the basin proper in the Grenville? Pacific Northwest Capital has struck it rich in an intrusive far outside the basin. Is there more? How far may we be from a volcanic centre to reap related ore vents? Contemporary experience tells us that 150 miles is not too far. In the straits of Jaun de Fuca off the left coast, sea bed orebodies are forming this very day at least that distance from Mt. St Helens and the Coastal volcanic extrusions. If you draw a 150 mile circle around Studbury you are in Kirkland Lake, Chapleau, Blind River, Sultan, Elliot Lake, Temiscaming, South River, or Midland. That is quite an area to look for related ore.
It might be there.
-- ed ...
**************************************
We are not at liberty to divulge anything but that you will be missing a million if you don't act now.
That should be enough to divulge.
Not that this is an offer to sell securities. It is more an opportunity to pre-gloat.
Gloat, gloat, gloat.
Nyah, nyah nyah nyah. you can't due any diligence, cause you only buy toilet paper off shysters. Nyah nyah nyah nyah nyah.
Feral Feline will bury you.
EC<:-}
If Microsoft can offer Mike Rowe ten dollars for Mikerowsoft echarters, then I cans sue echarters airlines for ten million.
I used to get mail under echarters@fuckmicrosoft.com I wonder if it is still operational.
EC<:-}
I heard this one may go to IPO soon. Something about an old mine they will put back in production. So far it's just at the rumour level, but it will break out of that soon I am told.
EC<:-}
Sounds like Voisey's Bay.
EC<:-}
Sorry I don't speak Latin. I did read the Vulgate, however.
Those major breaks and collisions sound pretty violent. This could give it an R rating.
http://www.siliconinvestor.com/stocktalk/msg.gsp?msgid=19704570
EC<:-}
peso-canuckistan copeck .02324
$150 copecks per metre all up including 43-101 geo, mobe demobe, coresplittah, sampling,assay, report and bribes.
X 43.029 X 150 = 6,454.39 pesos
or 64.544 phillipino pesos per centimeter.
That is for BQX.
EC<:-}
Mein Gott! I almos haf heart attack! Such naked salaciousness I haf nefer seen! No redeeming social value either. I am taking those slides into the washroom, see you in a half hour.
EC<:-}
I would guess at seven thousand five hundred riale per centimeter, give or take a blastoid. (Cost of drilling in the Phillipines).
Why, what is it?
EC<:-}.
Is that you in the hat?
I notice that you didn't mined having your pickshur taken after you had lured those babes into your cave. Nice move.
What was the name of your secret society?
Where we came from we would dress in ape suits, eat bananas and have our meetings in tree forts.
EC<:-}
Interesting map.
What country is that?
There used to be 138 metal mines in BC when I was last there.
What happened?
We are thinking of starting at least one. Maybe. But I need to get 2 million permission slips from Mr.Dodge, our homeroom business teacher.
EC<:-}
I didn't know there were any mines in BC. This is in BC isn't it? Or are they hiding it?
EC<:-}
The staff of the enterprise would like to have a word with you about a missing silver brick.
EC<:-}
That thin white laminae or lamellae alongside the oxide sulphide/au vein looks like it might come from a hot spring environment. Seems like encrustations or vuggy qtz/chalcedony in a limestone at a contact.
The vein material itself looks like it could be replacement. Low temperature stuff.
Do you have a geological description of the rock/vein? Is it Nevada/Arizona stuff?
EC<:-}
It's too late for that. Internet is my heroin. I can no longer use a pencil and paper. I have turned away in disgust from all people who do not have in house servers and use email. When I sleep my fingers go through typing motions. I greet people with "How's your URL?" And when people tell me they are not up to speed on technology and computers, then I force a smile, shake their hands and tell them "good, good, stay that way! Show those young upstarts its not all about the new stuff.. keep that stone axe with a vengeance.. at least it never needs sharpening!"
If you cannot build a webpage with hand coding of HTML I no longer want to know you. I will make exceptions, but only out of pity.
When I worked in the bush, I stopped using chain saws because they were always in the shop and never worked reliably. They were also dangerous. I went back to cutting line with an axe and brush-hook (fiskars).. I found that my production was as good as it was formerly with a chainsaw. At 40 degrees below zero, the axe (and oxhead) always started. And it was cheap on gas.
EC<:-}
I sense a sensing of desperation and loneliness coming from an unwillingness to believe. You must unlock your credulity to step into a world of possibility born in the minds of the creative nexus.
We are living in a hollow world. It is full of hollow people. If you hear the song I sing, you will see that you hold the keys to love and fear in your trembling hand.
There are people on the internet. Of course the retail investment market is lacking in guidance and wishes to use false touchstones. Mostly they talk about tree frogs and never discover the nature of Jade.
We talk about Jade, so naturally people used to making tree-frog expertise their mantra will not recognize it for what it is.
What is your interest in investment? Perhaps I can help you find the right mantra.
EC<:-}