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  • Originally posted by J_Player View Post
    << other stuff snipped >>

    Currently you are seeing the effects of what happens when I feel like I am being misquoted or being manipulated in some other cheesy manner. My cards haven't changed.

    Best wishes,
    J_P
    Hmmmm... a rather interesting response tactic, but from my point of view (and maybe others) rather confusing. I'm just hypothesizing now; but if you really were misquoted or being manipulated, wouldn't it be just as easy and perhaps achieve a more meaningful result for yourself, to just challenge the one you suspect rather than deliberate obfuscation, which tends to cause even less understanding on the part of your readers? Just a thought....

    My cards have not changed either, at least not since about 1995, when I became aware of "exactly" how all ideomotor-based dowsing contraptions work. And yes, I came to my conclusions, NOT through another investigator's experiences, but MY OWN. My knowledge did not come FREE, but involved some significant time and expense. Yes, I have first hand knowledge with a great many LRLs, all the way from the most simple to the highly complex containing a multitude of do-nothing appendages. No, I've not seen or tested an Examiner, but as I have iterated before; I take the word of Carl, basically because his findings on several others I've seen match my own completely.

    I think it is very admirable of you to want to give everything under the sun a fair chance to work, as advertised, and to experience it with your very own eyes. I have myself tried to remain completely opened minded about this topic, with the idea that perhaps something will come along that actually works according to real science. However, at the same time, I AM NOT going to throw away all the knowledge and experience I have gained so far, and in combination with pure logic and common sense; will form any new opinions accordingly. But then, that's just my approach... YMMV.

    The Wallet-Miner's Creed
    Why bother with the truth, when it doesn't suit the argument?

    Comment


    • Originally posted by Theseus
      if you really were misquoted or being manipulated, wouldn't it be just as easy and perhaps achieve a more meaningful result for yourself, to just challenge the one you suspect rather than deliberate obfuscation,....
      Actually this exactly what I did in the earlier post where the incident happened, remember?

      "No, that is not my belief or what I said. I doubt it is even what you infered unless you have a prejudiced point of view.

      Go back and read again....."


      The lengthy post you just read was not made for that particular incident. It was my answer to a number of comments you made in your new post stating you noticed a recent change that you were unclear about, and you don't know my stance on some topics. Since your forum user settings were set to not accept PMs, I decided to post a forum reply instead. This way is probably better anyway, because it will also clear up any misconceptions in case others are wondering.

      But don't worry, I haven't thrown anything away. I believe what I can prove to work, not just anecdotes. I just prefer to see it first-hand instead of taking others word for it. Carl agrees with this and even urges it. I think he knows there are some rare cases when he can be wrong, and doesn't even mind doing some checking in person himself to see if he's right or wrong. If I didn't agree with Carl's advice, then I may never have looked to see the evidence of gold corroding in the ground and sending ions up to the surface in trace amounts. Seems like a long shot, but sometimes it happens.

      Also don't worry, I don't care what anybody thinks about whether the examiner and other LRL works or not. I wouldn't expect anyone to believe anything that they were not convinced of -- for or against. But I also expect others won't expect me to believe or disbelieve unless I feel convinced by my own methods, not theirs as well. You see me making some strong posts when I see a lapse of logic used to arrive at a conclusion that looks wrong when LRL enthusiasts are trying to convince people a particular LRL works, but the same yardstick should also apply to skeptics at times when they jump to conclusions, including myself.

      Best wishes,
      J_P

      Comment


      • Originally posted by J_Player View Post
        ............ If I didn't agree with Carl's advice, then I may never have looked to see the evidence of gold corroding in the ground and sending ions up to the surface in trace amounts. Seems like a long shot, but sometimes it happens..........

        Best wishes,
        J_P

        Comment


        • Originally posted by J_Player View Post

          If I didn't agree with Carl's advice, then I may never have looked to see the evidence of gold corroding in the ground and sending ions up to the surface in trace amounts. Seems like a long shot, but sometimes it happens.
          Hi J_P

          how do you know that trace amount of gold ions originate from buried gold and not from planetary eroded gold found in traces everywhere in soil and even in sea water and vegetables. For instance there is more gold in a ton of sea water than in a ton of good to average gold ore. Gold ions are everywhere.

          If not, you maybe discover anti-gravity gold ions.
          Global capital is ruining your life?
          You have right to self-defence!

          Comment


          • Originally posted by WM6
            Hi J_P

            how do you know that trace amount of gold ions originate from buried gold and not from planetary eroded gold found in traces everywhere in soil and even in sea water and vegetables. For instance there is more gold in a ton of sea water than in a ton of good to average gold ore. Gold ions are everywhere.

            If not, you maybe discover anti-gravity gold ions.
            Hi WM6,

            I don't know any thing about anti-gravity gold ions.
            I only know about gold ions that are proved by scientists measuring them. The way I know the source of the gold ions is not from the ocean or the air is because scientists measured the anomalies of higher concentrations of gold ions in the soil above buried metals. When they found these high concentration of metal ions, they followed the path of the anomaly and found there are ions concentrated in a column of soil that can be traced down to the metal buried below the anomaly. Thousands of tests were performed to determine the source of metal of ions of gold and other metals which led to buried metals below.

            The research done at universities around the world shows that even deep buried metals including gold corrode under the ground by the action of bacteria and other microbes that are found on the surface of the metal. Some of these microbes produce cyanide and thiosulfate that dissolves gold and releases gold ions into the soil, suspended in the sulfur complex as well as organic acids produced by these microbes. Through a number of mechanisms, the ions move upwards in a column toward the surface where they can be measured as an anomaly that marks the location of metal below the surface.

            Many of these studies show that microgold particles are produced by similar microbes that are able to chemically precipitate the dissolved gold ions into solid gold. They have even shown many gold nuggets near the surface that were precipitated by microbes depositing gold dissolved from a source some large distance below. These ions moved up near the surface and were precipitated as new nuggets above, which is a chemical mechanism of moving gold without digging. But most of the gold transported by this method is in the form of tiny particles. The studies further suggest that much of the tiny particles of gold in the oceans originally began as natural gold deposits that were not eroded, but were transported by similar microbal action from metallic gold under the ocean floor.

            Is it possible that microscopic gold ions in the air or water in trace amounts is the source of ions in the soil?
            Maybe, but this is not what the scientists who measured the anomalies found. They found that the source was a gold deposit below. They are so sure of their findings that they developed soil sampling methods to make geochemical surveys at mine sites to pinpoint the location of gold and other metal deposits for the mines to extract. There are reports of successsful mine exploration all over the world for the past 17 years using this method called MMI (Mobile Metal Ion) surveys. These surveys take soil samples to see where there is a stronger metal ion concentration so they can pinpoint the metal ore deposits below.

            But the scientist aslo proved the source of metal ions in the soil is from buried metal by conducting experiments with fresh gold pellets that were placed in sterilized soil samples, then the same natural microbes that naturally attack gold were placed in some of the samples. They found that after 30-60 days, the shallow samples with the gold-attacking microbes developed a concentration of gold ions more than 10 times stronger than the concentrations they find from deeper natural gold deposits in the ground that have been buried for thousands of years.

            So to answer your question, I know the source of the gold ions comes from buried gold metal because I believe what the scientist and technicians measured. But even if somebody can prove these scientists were all wrong, I really don't care, because we have found from thousands of geologists soil surveys showing these anomalies in dissolved gold ions happen in locations where gold is below the anomaly. So regardless of the source, finding the anomaly will still will be useful for treasure hunting to find the buried gold below.

            Here are some of the reports you can read that were made by scientists who proved gold and other metals dissolve in soil after microbes attack it, and also reports of methods to find buried gold below these ion anomalies using MMI surveys:


            http://www.sciencedirect.com/science...e54ceb8221ec30



            Biominerals are generated by the subtle interaction of biological organization and mineral growth. They belong both to the living and the inanimate world and as such their genesis is among the most intri guing and fundamental subjects in science. However, the conceptual and technical resources that are available in physical chemistry and in the biological sciences is often inadequate for the elucidation of the pro blems involved, and hence this field is particularly difficult to ex plore. This may be an important reason why fundamental research on bio mineralization mechanisms has traditionally been carried out by a com paratively small group of scientists. There are signs, however, that the situation is ripe for a change. Various meetings on biomineralization have been organized in the last few years, particularly in the medical sector. It is generally felt that further developments in the therapy of bone and tooth diseases will be largely dependent on an improved understanding of the fundamen tal underlying mechanisms of biomineralization.

            Researchers found native gold, silver and platinum salts in the dust of decayed stumps. A ton of their ashes contains 3 kilograms of silver, nearly 200 milligrams of gold and 5 grams of platinum. Apparently, microbes and trees perform the gold-diggers&apos; function in the forests that grow above ore bodies -- within multiple years they draw soluble salts out of the soil and die off leaving behind the concentrate with &quot;enormous&quot; precious metals content.

            http://books.google.com/books?id=L8B...A495&dq=microb#
            Bacteria play an important role in the formation of gold nuggets in Australia according to new research published this month in the journal Science.

            Can bacteria help find gold? A pilot survey of 11 soil profiles across gold mining regions in the Peoples Republic of China indicates that elevated spore counts of Bacillus cereus, a common soil bacterium, were detected in areas adjacent to underlying gold deposits.

            Australian scientists have found that the bacterium Cupriavidus metallidurans catalyzes the biomineralization of gold by transforming toxic gold compounds to their metallic form using active cellular mechanism.

            http://www.gwrresources.com/s/NewsRe...Completion-Res...



            Actually there are hundreds of thousands of reports.
            Maybe easier to look at them on a google search instead of listing them:
            http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&r...f&aql=&aqi=&oq=

            Best wishes,
            J_P

            Comment


            • Originally posted by J_Player View Post
              H

              The research done at universities around the world shows that even deep buried metals including gold corrode under the ground by the action of bacteria and other microbes that are found on the surface of the metal. Some of these microbes produce cyanide and thiosulfate that dissolves gold and releases gold ions into the soil, suspended in the sulfur complex as well as organic acids produced by these microbes. Through a number of mechanisms, the ions move upwards in a column toward the surface where they can be measured as an anomaly that marks the location of metal below the surface.

              Many of these studies show that microgold particles are produced by similar microbes that are able to chemically precipitate the dissolved gold ions into solid gold. They have even shown many gold nuggets near the surface that were precipitated by microbes depositing gold dissolved from a source some large distance below. These ions moved up near the surface and were precipitated as new nuggets above, which is a chemical mechanism of moving gold without digging. But most of the gold transported by this method is in the form of tiny particles. The studies further suggest that much of the tiny particles of gold in the oceans originally began as natural gold deposits that were not eroded, but were transported by similar microbal action from metallic gold under the ocean floor.

              Is it possible that microscopic gold ions in the air or water in trace amounts is the source of ions in the soil?
              Maybe, but this is not what the scientists who measured the anomalies found. They found that the source was a gold deposit below. They are so sure of their findings that they developed soil sampling methods to make geochemical surveys at mine sites to pinpoint the location of gold and other metal deposits for the mines to extract. There are reports of successsful mine exploration all over the world for the past 17 years using this method called MMI (Mobile Metal Ion) surveys. These surveys take soil samples to see where there is a stronger metal ion concentration so they can pinpoint the metal ore deposits below.

              But the scientist aslo proved the source of metal ions in the soil is from buried metal by conducting experiments with fresh gold pellets that were placed in sterilized soil samples, then the same natural microbes that naturally attack gold were placed in some of the samples. They found that after 30-60 days, the shallow samples with the gold-attacking microbes developed a concentration of gold ions more than 10 times stronger than the concentrations they find from deeper natural gold deposits in the ground that have been buried for thousands of years.

              Actually there are hundreds of thousands of reports.

              Best wishes,
              J_P
              Thank you, J_P, for your thorough explanation. I read about it already before but forgot on moving micro-world in soil now (I am thinking only about plant).

              You explained very well, thank you, I have only commented on the erosion, this is not just a mechanical or physical, but also electro-chemical and biological.

              So for detecting buried gold we need only extra sensitive GIN (Gold Ions Nose) and voilà!

              For now, this can be the best non-electronic GIN solution:

              Global capital is ruining your life?
              You have right to self-defence!

              Comment


              • Originally posted by WM6
                Thank you, J_P, for your thorough explanation. I read about it already before but forgot on moving micro-world in soil now (I am thinking only about plant).

                You explained very well, thank you, I have only commented on the erosion, this is not just a mechanical or physical, but also electro-chemical and biological.

                So for detecting buried gold we need only extra sensitive GIN (Gold Ions Nose) and voilà!

                For now, this can be the best non-electronic GIN solution:

                Plants are involved in the process of moving gold. In addition to microscopic algaes that attack gold, one of the references I listed shows you where even trees draw dissolved gold and other metals out of the ground through their roots. "The researchers found native gold, silver and platinum salts in the dust of decayed stumps. A ton of their ashes contains 3 kilograms of silver, nearly 200 milligrams of gold and 5 grams of platinum"
                Plants only concentrate gold when they are growing in soil that has dissolved gold in it. (This implies there is gold metal below the ionised gold in the soil). See this report where plants were found to concentrate gold from when growing above gold in the ground: http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases...0818101731.htm


                The ions become bound with other constituents of the soil in the top 10-30cm below the surface. At these depths, the ions are no longer ions. For gold, the ions become mostly microscopic gold particles, which are estimated to account for most of the gold that is moved in the top layers of the soil in nature. This 10-30cm is also the depth at which erosion is likely to happen on large scale to wash tiny metallic gold particles into streams or to blow into the air.

                But no magic is needed to locate the gold ion concentrations. This is done by digging holes and taking soil samples to measure the amount of gold ions or other metal ions. This is all normal science. No Jinns or antimatter is needed. Why do you look for magical ways when we have good knowledge of the actual way this happens measured by scientists?

                Best wishes,
                J_P

                Comment


                • Originally posted by J_Player View Post

                  This is all normal science. No Jinns or antimatter is needed.
                  Yes, but magic is magic.
                  Global capital is ruining your life?
                  You have right to self-defence!

                  Comment


                  • Originally posted by WM6
                    Yes, but magic is magic.
                    Hi WM6,
                    Thanks for explaining it. Now I understand.

                    Best wishes,
                    J_P

                    Comment


                    • Originally posted by J_Player View Post

                      So to answer your question, I know the source of the gold ions comes from buried gold metal because I believe what the scientist and technicians measured. But even if somebody can prove these scientists were all wrong, I really don't care, because we have found from thousands of geologists soil surveys showing these anomalies in dissolved gold ions happen in locations where gold is below the anomaly. So regardless of the source, finding the anomaly will still will be useful for treasure hunting to find the buried gold below.
                      Thanks for the interesting links and such...but, it seems as if the testing was done underground. In other words....soil samples were taken from the ground...and then the soil was analyzed. Unless I missed it...I did not see where scientists or mining companies were able to "detect" gold ions without testing the soil first.

                      Again...unless I missed it in one of those links...there is no evidence of airborne gold ions, that can be captured and analyzed from the surface. Especially using random air samples. Difference between treasure hunting and mining

                      Comment


                      • Originally posted by Jim View Post
                        Thanks for the interesting links and such...but, it seems as if the testing was done underground. In other words....soil samples were taken from the ground...and then the soil was analyzed. Unless I missed it...I did not see where scientists or mining companies were able to "detect" gold ions without testing the soil first.

                        Again...unless I missed it in one of those links...there is no evidence of airborne gold ions, that can be captured and analyzed from the surface. Especially using random air samples. Difference between treasure hunting and mining
                        No, Jim, I don't think you missed anything.

                        The ions become bound with other constituents of the soil in the top 10-30cm below the surface.

                        From my understanding of what J_P is expounding on here, there are NO air-born ions rising up from buried gold. Apparently, "certain" scientists and mining exploration folks are using soil samples to discover buried gold deposits, by analyzing and detecting these migrating ions in the top layers of soil only.

                        Since J_P has recently, and emphatically, indicated to me; "I also am interested in learning some facts instead of just believeing(sic) what other people say." ....then I would, by his own remarks, have to believe that he has actually witnessed these gold discovery techniques in operation.

                        The Wallet-Miner's Creed
                        Why bother with the truth, when it doesn't suit the argument?

                        Comment


                        • Originally posted by Jim
                          Thanks for the interesting links and such...but, it seems as if the testing was done underground. In other words....soil samples were taken from the ground...and then the soil was analyzed. Unless I missed it...I did not see where scientists or mining companies were able to "detect" gold ions without testing the soil first.

                          Again...unless I missed it in one of those links...there is no evidence of airborne gold ions, that can be captured and analyzed from the surface. Especially using random air samples. Difference between treasure hunting and mining
                          Hi Jim,
                          Yes, the MMI testing is done by digging samples of soil from below the top layer of dirt where gold ions will show a representative concentration. But mining companies use a lot of other methods to indicate what is below the ground besides MMI testing. Some of these methods are not done from below the ground, but above. In most cases, these tests are not detecting gold ions.

                          Capturing gold ions from the surface doesn't sound easy to me. To start with, the concentrations they measure below the ground are in the parts per trillion and sometimes less. By the time they reach the surface, they become bound with other elements or become metallic gold particles. Maybe a few ions of the parts per trillion could somehow escape into the air, but how would you collect them?
                          Wouldn't a single ion blow away in the wind, or quickly neutralise with a charged particle or molecule in the air?
                          The whole reason why they cease to be ions after they rise from the lower layers of soil is because they no longer are in an environment that has active electrolytes and complexes that support gold ions. They are moving to the surface that is rich in a large array of materials and particles that will bind the ions. This is true of the air as well, which has charged gas molecules as well as particles with molecules that can combine with metal ions from salts or other complexes. In the case of gold, when it loses it's supporting chemical complex, it usually combines with itself to form a metallic gold molecule, that can grow into a particle if other molecules attach.

                          The gold in the air I read about is metallic microparticles, not ionic. From what I read it was measured at less than 0.003ng/kg for air on average. Because of the wind action, I doubt these measurements would be useful for locating buried gold.

                          Best wishes,
                          J_P

                          Comment


                          • Originally posted by Theseus
                            ...Since J_P has recently, and emphatically, indicated to me; "I also am interested in learning some facts instead of just believeing(sic) what other people say." ....then I would, by his own remarks, have to believe that he has actually witnessed these gold discovery techniques in operation.
                            Hi Theseus,
                            You can believe whatever you have to believe as long as you don't try to represent your beliefs and conclusions as things that I said.

                            But to give you some help in what to believe, yes, I have witnessed gold exploration techniques being used by geologists in operation.
                            And no, not the technique of digging a hole and putting dirt in a plastic bag bound for the MMI lab in Canada.

                            Best wishes,
                            J_P

                            Comment


                            • Originally posted by J_Player View Post
                              Hi Theseus,
                              You can believe whatever you have to believe as long as you don't try to represent your beliefs and conclusions as things that I said.

                              Best wishes,
                              J_P
                              Leaving ones' beliefs, conclusions, opinions and inferences out of the equation is no doubt the best route to take towards a clear understanding.

                              Rather, just pay attention to the actual words he speaks; "I also am interested in learning some facts instead of just believeing(sic) what other people say."


                              The Wallet-Miner's Creed
                              Why bother with the truth, when it doesn't suit the argument?

                              Comment


                              • Originally posted by Theseus
                                Leaving ones' beliefs, conclusions, opinions and inferences out of the equation is no doubt the best route to take towards a clear understanding.

                                Rather, just pay attention to the actual words he speaks; "I also am interested in learning some facts instead of just believeing(sic) what other people say."

                                Excellent! Will you be going to see for yourself with your own eyes too?

                                Best wishes,
                                J_P

                                Comment

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