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Prospectors

If you like to dig for gold so does the OSPA, we love to dig for gold.

Contact Us

Support

Want to know more or need help go to our about us page or contact us page.

Membership

Want to join

We are taking new members. Go to our membership page for more information.

Welcome to The Ohio State Prospectors Association

The premiere club for all things prospecting in Ohio.  Gold panning, highbanking, dredging, sluicing, metal detecting, rock hounding, gem grubbing or fossil hunting.  Discussions about all of these outdoor activities in the Buckeye State can be found on our forum.  Sign up here

Wondering if there is Gold in Ohio?  Click Here to find out.

There is Gold in Ohio and the OSPA has three of the best gold claims in the state.  More info on OSPA claims.

If you want to see for yourself, Click here to Contact Us now for info on visiting our properties as a guest of a member.

Announcements:

Next Meeting

The next meeting is scheduled for Feb 26th at the Gander Mountain Hilliard meeting room.  Starts promptly at 11:00am with potluck to follow, or maybe first depending on how hungry we are.  More information will be availabe on the Forum.  

Thinking about joining a propecting club or interested in learning more about gold prospecting or the OSPA?  Come to a meeting or join the forum and introduce yourself. Guests are always welcome.

Last Meeting

Last meeting was on Jan 22nd at the Gander Mountain Hilliard meeting room.   Congratulations to the raffle winners and thanks to all that brought a dish for the potluck.

Jan2012 Meeting

News & Events

GPAA Gold and Treasure Show Dates

3/10/2012 to 3/11/2012 Tehama District Fair  530-527-5920 Red Bluff CA 

03/17/2012 to 03/18/2012 Puyallup Fair and Events Center 253-845-1771 Puyallup WA 

03/24/2012 to 03/25/2012 Oregon State Fair Center 503-947-3247 Salem OR 

10/20/2012 10/21/2012 Montgomery County Fair 937-224-1619 Dayton OH

Complete GPAA 2012 Show Schedule

Other Shows in Ohio

Gold & Relic Show - 3/3 - 4  
Pritchard Laughlin Civic Center 
7033 Glenn Highway, 
Cambridge, OH 43725

Mineral, Fossil, Gem and Jewelry Show  4/7 - 8
Franklin Co. Veteran's Memorial
300 W. Broad St, Columbus, OH

GeoFair 2012 - 5/5 - 6  
Cincinnati Gardens 
2250 E. Seymour Ave
Cincinnati, Ohio 45212 


This Week on the Creek

Updated 2-10-2012 - Some members got out to the Double D claim during the first week of Feb and took advantage of this mild winter we are having so far.  Looks like they are having fun and got some gold to show for it.

If you have pictures or a story you would like to share in this section, send me (JDish) a PM on the forum.

DoubleD Feb 2012DoubleD Feb 2012

DoubleD Feb 2012DoubleD Feb 2012


Gold Lesson

Golds atomic number of 79 makes it one of the higher atomic number elements which occur naturally. Like all elements with atomic numbers larger than iron, gold is thought to have been formed from a supernovae nucleosynthesis process. Their explosions scattered metal-containing dusts (including heavy elements like gold) into the region of space in which they later condensed into our solar system and the Earth. On Earth, whenever elemental gold occurs, it appears most often as a metal solid solution of gold with silver, i.e. a gold silver alloy. Such alloys usually have a silver content of 8 - 10%. Electrum is elemental gold with more than 20% silver. Electrums color runs from golden silvery to silvery, dependent upon the silver content. The more silver, the lower the specific gravity. Relative sizes of a an 860kg rock ore, and the 30g of gold that can be extracted from it. Toi gold mine, Japan. Gold left behind after pyrite cube dissolved away.Gold is found in ores made up of rock with very small or microscopic particles of gold. This gold ore is often found together with quartz or sulfide minerals such as Fools Gold, which is a pyrite. These are called lode deposits. Native gold is also found in the form of free flakes, grains or larger nuggets that have been eroded from rocks and end up in alluvial deposits (called placer deposits). Such free gold is always richer at the surface of gold-bearing veins owing to the oxidation of accompanying minerals followed by weathering, and washing of the dust into streams and rivers, where it collects and can be welded by water action to form nuggets. Gold sometimes occurs combined with tellurium as the minerals calaverite, krennerite, nagyagite, petzite and sylvanite, and as the rare bismuthide maldonite (Au2Bi) and antimonide aurostibite (AuSb2). Gold also occurs in rare alloys with copper, lead, and mercury: the minerals auricupride (Cu3Au), novodneprite (AuPb3) and weishanite ((Au,Ag)3Hg2). Recent research suggests that microbes can sometimes play an important role in forming gold deposits, transporting and precipitating gold to form grains and nuggets that collect in alluvial deposits.