The combination of the two can be a headache, especially if all you have to work with is a pan. When I started prospecting, I bought a spiral panning machine that separates gold or heavy materials out, called the Desert Fox. I came very close to selling the thing, because I was under the impression that it didn't work at all. I would run all of my concentrates at different angles and water speeds and get nothing but black sand, no matter what I did. It took me a while to figure out that there wasn't actually any gold in the material I was running(duh).
Once I actually started bringing home fine gold in the concentrates, the Desert Fox really showed its true potential. I'm now a solid believer that it can separate gemstones or any denser material for that matter, and it can do so quite efficiently when set up proper. Its ease actually allows me time to do work more while I'm at the river, instead of panning out my concentrates where there is water.
My process goes something like this:
When I run material, I use my snifter bottle to pick up gold I can see on the indicator matting. This gives me a peace of mind that the gold isn't going to travel further back into the sluice, where it has a greater chance of getting washed out. Also, I have the bulk of my gold (or so I hope) to pan out at the end of the day, but its always a manageable amount of black sand. Everything else sits in the sluice until a clean-up, where I dump the whole sluice load into a dedicated concentrate bucket.
This represents two days of sluicing. The concentrates come from Cache Creek BLM area by Granite, CO |
All of this material was removed using a magnet. Magnetite retains the magnetic orientation of when it crystallized due to its atomic structure, and will retain its magnetism for a very long time. |
Some processed gold from the Desert Fox |
Desert Fox doing what it does best. |
I almost didn't run my 20+ material through the Desert Fox, because I thought that it might be easier to hand pan. I'm very glad that I did, though. When I was not expecting much gold at all from this material, the big guy on the right jumped out and ran up the spiral. It is my first nugget to register on a scale, weighing in at a massive .1 grams, making its worth around $5 currently.