Gold Bearing Fluids with Prof Stephen Cox: Part 1
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 15 ก.ย. 2024
- Prof. Stephen Cox talks about the origins and chemistry of gold-bearing fluids, and how the fluids are stored in deeply buried rocks. See PART 2 at • Gold Bearing Fluids wi... and more about gold at goo.gl/0mw8Z4
These are such interesting and worthwhile videos. Thank you to those contributing their knowledge -- and I really wish you would make more!!
Fascinating. The best explanation I've ever heard of these processes.
Hard rock university sent me. Great Video ty for sharing
Hi Steve, I'm looking for the chemical equations associated with gold formation during retrograde metamorphism of pyroxenes to amphiboles. Do you think you can help me please! Many thanks.
Awsome! Thank You. I love all the videos on your channel and can't wait to see more....
Thanks for your support. Part 2 of Stephen Cox's interview is in the production pipeline.
Highly informative and illustrated videos, thanks for sharing, expects some more such videos in future
Thanks, I can't wait to watch part 2.
Auriferousoz Thanks for your support. Part 2 is now online at th-cam.com/video/a2iEjXIUJEI/w-d-xo.html
Great discussion...
Wonderful! Thank-you so much for uploading!
Thanks very much for your support.
I think of it as a hydraulic cylinder that can push a massive amount of pressure to move something.
good stuff. love the video's
Thank You and glad you like them!
thanks for shairng
You're very welcome and thanks for watching
Thanks
Sounds like hydrofracutering oil bearing shales to create the porosity needed to allow the oil to flow to the recovery well. Only on a vastly larger, hotter and higher pressure system. Interesting.
Yes there are some similarities
Very interesting subject wonder if anybody has tried the heat pressure and fluid into an actual experiment. Good video but really short.
Paul Giamatti's brother is an OK interviewer
I don't understand why the gold couldn't be transported from the magma below the crust, it was interesting about the spacing of deposits though.
Ammon Neff magma is liquid rock, gold deposits form as the plume of gold bearing fluid rises through fractured rock - at certain heights, as pressure and temps change elements fall-out of solution, leaving the vein of gold in the fractured rock through which it moved
I enjoyed the video with the soft tone. It's annoying when everyone else is just screaming, all around youtube
thanks
He avoided the question ,where did the deep water come from.
So it will take an estimated million years to see some new gold formations.... Man I will be dead by then.
YeeeeeeeeHaaaaaaaa
Came here from Hard Rock University
I don't buy into this theory.