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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 75.80.37.234 (talk) at 09:50, 17 September 2021 (Shaker Table: new section). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

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This article is or was the subject of a Wiki Education Foundation-supported course assignment. Further details are available on the course page. Student editor(s): PatJardine, Jessicanajera (article contribs). Peer reviewers: AnnikaET, Joedf, Lukaszquinn, Carson209, HPokrandt.

Name

This article says "name derives from the French placer, meaning pleasure", but I have a text which says the word is of Spanish origin. Could someone verify which source is incorrect please? Greenmountainboy

Spanish origin would mean "pleasure" as well. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Jessicanajera (talkcontribs) 01:17, 16 February 2018 (UTC)[reply]

According to Merriam-Webster:

  Pronunciation: 'pla-s&r
  Function: noun
  Etymology: Spanish, from Catalan, submarine plain, from plaza place, from Latin platea broad street -- more at PLACE
  Date: 1848
  an alluvial, marine, or glacial deposit containing particles of valuable mineral and especially of gold

--Maximus Rex 20:31, 9 Dec 2003 (UTC)


In modern french "placer" means "to put". I see no connection with pleasure, but it may still be related to "placer mining" somehow. --FvdP

So I will now change "french" to "spanish". Is it possible that someone mistook placer for plaisir? Greenmountainboy

I'm responsible for the reference to the French. I got it from another article, upon the creation of this one. I've forgotten what this other article was, but I do remember that it indicated the French. In modern Spanish, placer means pleasure. In my limited experience, I don't think I've ever seen it used as a verb (cf. poner), nor am I aware of the geological definition (no surprise there), but I'll check my dictionary when I get access to it (four days from now). --Smack 01:50, 20 Dec 2004 (UTC)

hydrostatic pressure

This section needs some minor editing. The reference to hydrostatic pressure is not accurate. First, hydrostatic pressure refers to water pressures when the water is not moving and the discussion appears to be referring to moving water to move sediment through a sluice (see figure). Second, Using water is not necessarily the only way in which placer mining is accomplished. My geology dictionary (Glossary of Geology, 4th Ed., 1997, Julia Jackson, Ed.) defines placer as a surface deposit and placer mining as the extraction of these deposits (by inference: regardless of means). That is the way I have always understood the terms.

Hmmmm....

In California, from 1853 to 1884, "hydraulicking" of placers removed an enormous amount of material from the goldfields, material that was carried downstream and raised the level of the Central Valley by some seven feet in some areas and settled in a huge layer at the bottom of San Francisco Bay.

Interesting; the degree to which San Francisco Bay/Sacramento River estuary was filled in by this would be a useful figure. What's piqued my interest is all that sediment on the bottom of San Francisco Bay; old mining techniques were very low-efficiency and there's a good chance there's a high percentage of gold in that "huge layer at the bottom of San Francisco Bay". Reminds me of Dawson City, Yukon, a bit, where twenty years ago or so old tailings were used to pave the streets of a new subdivision. The tailings turned out to have a higher concentration of gold than material being sluiced on Eldorado and All Gold Creeks, and the entire subdivision and the source for the gravels used wound up being staked and mined. Many old tailings from gold workings have been re-excavated and re-worked, sometimes earning more than the original prospect (not that the original prospectors were always honest about how much they were pulling in). Not that digging up the bottom of San Francisco Bay is a viable option, given latter-day environmental standards, and I'm not a miner; but it's interesting nonetheless.Skookum1 19:11, 13 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Placer gold accumulation

Logic says in syllogism - if water flows down-hill over rock, then eventually, the precious metal or mineral will wash down to the valley. Further, if the matter (gold & mineral) is heavier than water, then force and gravity will distribute the matter. Force (water current) will push the matter down the path of least resistance. Gravity will attract that matter to the centre of the earth. Therefore, matter is washed from the hills to the centre and sides of the water-flow. Stream tests have shown that sediment will gather at the bend in the stream (water-flow) but (gold) accumulation, in the centre, is just Baer Law theory. Rodeney (talk) 14:35, 31 August 2008 (UTC) Rodeney[reply]

I presume you are quoting Emmons 1937 Gold Deposits of the World here. Please attribute your sources. Also, this is the talk page of the article - so are you proposing an addition or what? Vsmith (talk) 15:34, 31 August 2008 (UTC)[reply]

Methods and Deposits additions

I plan on filling out the sections on individual forms of placer mining and adding citations, since they are all currently very short and have none. Specifically, I would like to add information about the expected gold output from each method, along with where and when they are most commonly used. I would also like to contribute to the placer deposit section, which is currently very short with no citations.Finally, I would like to expand the history of placer mining section, primarily by adding citations since there currently aren't any. To find this information, I will begin with the following sources. I plan to begin work on these edits in the coming weeks, and to begin adding them to the actual article in late march.

International Correspondence Schools (Scranton, Pa.) and Collier Engineer Company (Scranton, Pa.). Placer Mining: A Hand-Book for Klondike and Other Miners and Prospectors, with Introductory Chapters regarding the Recent Gold Discoveries in the Yukon Valley, the Routes to the Gold Fields, Outfit Required, and Mining Regulations of Alaska and the Canadian Yukon; also, a Map of the Yukon Valley Embracing all the Information Obtainable from Reliable Sources Up to December 1st, 1897. Vol. no. 15911. Scranton, Pa: Colliery Engineer Company, 1897.

Basque, G. (1999). Methods of placer mining. Surrey, B.C: Heritage House.

Garnett, R. H. T.. (2015). Graphical representation of production results versus estimates in placer mining. Institution of Mining and Metallurgy. Transactions. Section B: Applied earth sciences. (124)3. p.175 - 190.

Ferguson, R. I.. (2015). Reconstructing a sediment pulse: Modeling the effect of placer mining on Fraser River, Canada. Journal of geophysical research. Earth surface. (120)7. p.1436 - 1454.

Kennedy, M. (2008). fraser river placer mining landscapes. BC Studies, (160), 35.

Nelson, A. D.. (2012). Placer mining along the Fraser River, British Columbia: The geomorphic impact. Geological Society of America bulletin. (124)7-8. p.1212 - 1228.

Shaker Table

Can someone knowledgeble on the topic please add shaker table to the list of methods. 75.80.37.234 (talk) 09:50, 17 September 2021 (UTC)SF[reply]