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Gold And Its Oldest Known Roots, Older Than Many May Think.

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Valued Member
United States
362 Posts
 Posted 07/29/2011  9:24 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add ICanSeeYou7687 to your friends list
Rbethell didn't you say in an older post you were 18 and a freshman in college? I don't know if you can call yourself a "long time history buff"

Lol, I just found that amusing :P
Bedrock of the Community
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10045 Posts
 Posted 07/29/2011  9:29 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add DVCollector to your friends list
Well...an advanced race capable of space travel over light years wouldn't have to come to our distant planet to find gold. Undoubtedly, it's widespread across the Universe, probably created in supernovae.

Back to ancient earth, I'm sure gold was coveted immediately after the first human found a placer deposit.
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 Posted 07/29/2011  9:31 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add mkfarm to your friends list
Actually a Honus Wagner card is really worthless. Just a piece of paper that I have no interest in. Give a poor man gold even in Africa and they know what to do with it. They move out of the poor area. When I was in Northern Africa everyone knew what gold was including the people eating from the scarps I tossed in the trash.

It is actually good timing you mention the poor Africans and their knowledge of gold today. Because the biggest news in a little country in Africa goes like this. Poor African farmers are leaving the fields for gold.
Gold was discovered in the northwest corner of a poor county called the Central African Republic. For the past two years more and more families have arrived to dig for the gold. This includes full families the men, women and children.

Many farmers have abandon their fields to search for gold.
Riches are hard to even imagine in the Central African Republic -- it's ranked among the 10 poorest countries in the world.

So lets not be too quick to say the poor and the starving do not value gold.
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 Posted 07/29/2011  9:40 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add junior e to your friends list
I have a creek that runs through my yard and it has a shale and bedrock bottom. I took a screwdriver and dug about two gallons of sand and small minerals. I panned it out and sure enough there was a small group of grainy gold once I got it panned down to the black sand. I live on a hillside overlooking Lake Erie Nd at one time in the distant past glaciers cut out a pretty good sized lake up on top of the hill above me. It was kind of cool finding gold in my yard. Maybe My ancestors were the Anunnaki!
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 Posted 07/29/2011  10:33 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Silverhawk74 to your friends list
Junior too cool that your panning for gold now in the backyard, lol....

I agree farm, as any poor soul in this world finds a big nugget of gold, they are gonna form a possum grin from ear to ear! Then look both directions and tuck that nugget away, and start thinking their ship has come in and how are they are gonna cash it in, lol....

With my bad luck however, I would not find a giant gold nugget, but perhaps a singin frog like the poor guy on the old Looney tunes cartoon that sings...."Hello my baby, hello my darlin, hello my rag time gal!"

And of course the frog only sings for him, and says ribbit anytime he tries to share his great find, lol....

Edited by Silverhawk74
07/29/2011 10:38 pm
Valued Member
Philippines
65 Posts
 Posted 07/29/2011  10:54 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add saturno to your friends list
"Maybe My ancestors were the Anunnaki!"
@ junior e - well if the story is true, then WE are all Anunnaki's half-mixed descendants!

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Australia
2830 Posts
 Posted 07/29/2011  11:00 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Peter THOMAS to your friends list
great reading ...

Junior: when are you next having a barbecue ? I'll bring my own pan, and some steaks ...
I took my boys to a theme park at the far end of the country (3,500 km away) in January, and one attraction was the gold-panning. The 8yo was soon bored, but the 7yo stuck with me until closing time. Some of those grains are very tiny, but my goodness, how they sparkle !
We had already booked our June holiday elsewhere, when I discovered that there is a gold panning competition about 250km from me, but we have put that on the agenda for next year. I don't imagine that he, I, or we are "competitive", but we might be able to learn something by watching and listening to the experts.

SilverHawk: I have done a lot of genealogy, and helped others with theirs. There is certainly a lot of evidence of "alien abductions", and perhaps that is another phase of what you refer to ?

Peter
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 Posted 07/29/2011  11:41 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Silverhawk74 to your friends list
"Well...an advanced race capable of space travel over light years wouldn't have to come to our distant planet to find gold."

They may if they have a huge use for gold and no longer had any of their own and we were their next closet solid source. Their uses for it could be jewelry and decor, their currency, or like I stated, perhaps it hold secrets we can't understand or tap into yet....

Crystal is not a PM of course, but this is fun stuff here....

This is really taping into another angle here and jumpin tracks a weee bit, but you guys will find this fascinating as do I. Not really jumping tracks, crystal skulls. They say they are 12 for each of the 12 known planets with intelligent life. We are known as...."The planet of the children", they say. There is a 13th skull (That is correct, right out of that bad Indiana Jones movie, lol) with all the info of all the world's contained in it, and the other 12 has info from the world it came....

This is the interesting part, and hang with me here, as I think it is Microsoft has even now released that crystal has amazing storage capabilities, via way more than our current networks or known capabilities....

Like eight have been found here on Earth, and scientist can't explain their property's and how they were made....

http://www.dawn.com/2011/02/26/myth...hem-why.html

Or if you have some time and want view check out this 8 part you-tube series....

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rR32IsutTws
Edited by Silverhawk74
07/29/2011 11:47 pm
Rest in Peace
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 Posted 08/03/2011  04:13 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add biggfredd to your friends list

Quote:
When Columbus sailed his almighty ship over here to the US, he was astonished at how much gold the Indians had.


Why? They had already been trading with India, he just thought he found a shorter route.
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Australia
16868 Posts
 Posted 08/03/2011  08:06 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Sap to your friends list
Earth has to be one of the worst planets in the universe to hunt for gold on. The gravity's way too high, the atmosphere's too thick, you've got to contend with cantankerous native lifeforms, and most of the good stuff has sunk down into the core - you'd have to blow the place up to get at most of it.

For a spacefaring race that desperately needed to mine alien gold, mining asteroids in star clusters with lots of supernova remnants would be a far more efficient means of acquiring it.

Of course, if they've got such advanced technology, why wouldn't they simply drop pieces of lead into their neutron transmutator and make as much gold as they needed? Heck, we have the technology to transmute gold, at a cost of billions of dollars an ounce - and that's still cheaper than flying all the way to Omega Centauri and bringing their gold all the way back here.
Don't say "infinitely" when you mean "very"; otherwise, you'll have no word left when you want to talk about something really infinite. - C. S. Lewis
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 Posted 08/03/2011  3:39 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add junior e to your friends list
I like Earth. It has such nice atmosphere. Hawk- very. Interesting read about the crystal skulls. Quite a bit of Guatamala tied in with them. When I went to Cancun I took the tour to Chichhen Itza and the stone work of the Mayans is incredible. It's possibly not by chance that all of the amazing crystal work is so close to where the big asteroid hit and ended the realm of the dinosaurs. The crystals could have blown out of the inner crust and been found by the Mayans. I would love to see the Amethyst Crystal Skull. There certainly are a lot of ancient artworks depicting beings of an unusual design. Where did they come up with that vision, but peyote or other hallucinogens could have made for some wild visual experiences.
Edited by junior e
08/03/2011 6:01 pm
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 Posted 08/03/2011  5:10 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Silverhawk74 to your friends list
Good points Sap, esp the points about asteroid mining or Alchemy. Again fun to speculate, we will in all likelihood never know for sure, lol....

But then again, all intelligent species seem to have some members with that certain something that drives them to search and explore. And of course upon seeing a beautiful blue planet like Junior pointed out, that would be an amazing site to see in the Universe. Planets like Earth are probably far and few between. It would be like finding a needle amongst a 100,000 acres of haystacks I am sure to any species....

I was reading a great yahoo article about a recent piece from the Columbia, and read some great comments. One fellow listed about fifty pattens NASA formed through space exploration, and another pointed out that the pilot of the Columbia held tight on the controls trying to steer that burning shuttle, up until 23 seconds before complete disintegration, a true hero or Rocket man as the poster called him. Heck all the astronauts that died, seven from Columbia, another seven from Challenger including a teacher, and of course the three that died in the launch platform fire back in the Apollo days, and of course test pilots in the early days, a number I am not sure on....

My point, I think space exploration is what made this country great back in the peak of NASA, before we stop caring about it, and started shipping our company's oversea for cheap labor. Anyhow, two big things I think this country is missing now, just my worthless two and one Half Cents, lol.....
Edited by Silverhawk74
08/03/2011 5:22 pm
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 Posted 08/03/2011  5:27 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add junior e to your friends list
Maybe gold is the key element to achieving light speed. It makes me feel good when I hold it, so it could be a propellant.
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 Posted 08/03/2011  6:50 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Earle42 to your friends list
silverhawk74 said:

Quote:
"be more prepared when the Anunnaki arrive."


Too late, we are already here.


Seriously... the first time I ever saw a larger piece of gold - refined and worked into a coin - I knew why people throughout the ages cherished this metal.

The same thing with diamonds. When the fire of a diamond is witnessed, it is simple to see why these are cherished (although highly overpriced and a terrible investment). Glass and even zircons just do not match the diamond.

Even in very old civilizations we find they could refine gold b/c of its soft nature. Hence it was probably one of the first to be refined. It is useless for weapons, but oh what a beautiful ornamental item it makes. You just cannot compare the look of this metal to any other for beauty. Copper, steel, chrome, can all look really nice, but the color/shimmer/luster/whatever of gold seems to be preferred by humans.

Since the supply is far less than the demand, value is naturally attached as some are willing to pay/give more for it than others.

Of course this is only my opinion - we cannot go back and find out for sure.


How much squash could a Sasquatch squash if a Sasquatch would squash squash?
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 Posted 08/03/2011  7:55 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Ed_B to your friends list

Quote:
Maybe gold is the key element to achieving light speed. It makes me feel good when I hold it, so it could be a propellant.

Sounds good to me. Maybe they have a multi-ton gold transducer that is used to open wormholes in space for their travel?
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