ECONOMIC GEOLOGY
course. Any colors of gold would be recorded on a sketch
map, and they would increase in size and number toward
the source of the gold. Where the colors are abundant some
grains of gold would probably be found, and perhaps ovoid
particles with a spiral mark ; they, from their resemblance to
the dung of mice, are known as mouse-droppings. They are
due to a grain of gold having been hammered by pebbles
into a thin disc, which has been coiled up as it rolled down
stream ; the outer edge of the disc forms the spiral mark.
Coarse angular grains are called shed gold because it is thus
shed from the parent rock. Owing to the softness of gold the
grains are soon worn smooth, so that shed gold has not
travelled far. If no gold or only a few colors are found
beyond a place with shed gold, the prospector infers that he
has passed its source, and would search for a “ lode ” from
which the gold may have come. The most likely lode would
bea vein of quartz ; and any quartz-veins would be examined,
especially if the quartz contained cavities and were stained
Srown by oxide of iron.
If no rock is exposed the search is continued by loaming.
The prospector has a long cotton bag, perhaps 6 feet long
and 6 inches in diameter. He digs a regular series of holes
and places a sample of earth from the bottom of each in
the loam-bag and ties a string just above each sample ;
the process is repeated until the bag is full, when it resembles
a string of sausages. The loam-bag prevents any mistake
in the order of the samples, which are washed one by one
in the tin dish at the river side. The results are marked
on a plan which shows the distribution of the gold. A line
could probably be drawn on the plan separating the gold-
bearing from the barren samples. The source of the gold
should lie near that line. The prospector would next
search for the lode by costeaning, a Cornish term for open
trenches, or, if the material be too deep, by a line of pits.
The * costeans ” would be dug to the bedrock, and should
expose the lode from which the gold has come. The lode
would be sampled to determine whether it is rich enough
to repay working, or whether, until the country has been
settled, it would be more profitable to work only the alluvial
material,
During this prospecting if other valuable metals are