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Re: ctrumabll post# 109575

Wednesday, 04/03/2019 2:31:20 PM

Wednesday, April 03, 2019 2:31:20 PM

Post# of 222534
Interesting report and I understand what you are sharing. I have seen this before of exaggeration in reports. However, that does not mean the gold properties are valueless.


Another point I will also make is that most people of today have been BS'ed into believing we have mined out all the gold. That is true at $18 per ounce...completely false at $1300 per ounce.


In British Columbia for example we have mined maybe 2% of the wealth in the province. The old timers only took what was easy and also had very inefficient mining practices of the time. They sure as hell never found it all either.


A good placer example is the show gold rush. I could recover an obscene amount of gold just from their tailing piles because they are using inefficient recovery equipment. The same recovery that is similar to the bucket dredges that mined the Klondyke river in the 1898 goldrush. The tailing piles of those operations are rich in today's value.


Hard rock mines that closed often have dump piles that contain enough free milling gold to open up a mine. Again this has to do with inefficient mining practices in history.


For another example Barkerville gold mines released a report that was also fantastic and they got their pee pee slapped. However, I am familiar with the region and they have very rich ground regardless of the embellished report they wrote. They have N43 -101 for a major market too.


Again I will say to you that the reports MAY have been embellished but that does NOT mean the claims are valueless. I saw a lot of reference to historical mines in the area which is good as it lends credence to the potential on these properties.


It is why I am looking for more information on the properties themselves. People can lie...the real story is in the ground!


Oh by the way mark Twain said "a mine is a hole in the ground with a liar standing next to it."


The rest of the story is the dry hole that mark twain had dug he sold to someone who struck it rich a couple feet deeper...




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