Single Neutron Star Merger Event
Single Neutron Star Merger Event
Single Neutron Star Merger Event
Occurrence
On Earth, gold is found in ores in rock formed from the Precambrian time onward.[65] It most often
occurs as a native metal, typically in a metal solid solution with silver (i.e. as a gold silver alloy).
Such alloys usually have a silver content of 8–10%. Electrum is elemental gold with more than 20%
silver, and is commonly known as white gold. Electrum's color runs from golden-silvery to silvery,
dependent upon the silver content. The more silver, the lower the specific gravity.
Native gold occurs as very small to microscopic particles embedded in rock, often together
with quartz or sulfide minerals such as "fool's gold", which is a pyrite.[66] These are
called lode deposits. The metal in a native state is also found in the form of free flakes, grains or
larger nuggets[65] that have been eroded from rocks and end up in alluvialdeposits called placer
deposits. Such free gold is always richer at the exposed surface of gold-bearing veins, owing to
the oxidation of accompanying minerals followed by weathering; and by washing of the dust into
streams and rivers, where it collects and can be welded by water action to form nuggets.
Gold sometimes occurs combined with tellurium as
the minerals calaverite, krennerite, nagyagite, petzite and sylvanite (see telluride minerals), and as
the rare bismuthide maldonite (Au2Bi) and antimonide aurostibite (AuSb2). Gold also occurs in rare
alloys with copper, lead, and mercury: the minerals auricupride (Cu3Au), novodneprite (AuPb3) and
weishanite ((Au, Ag)3Hg2).
Recent research suggests that microbes can sometimes play an important role in forming gold
deposits, transporting and precipitating gold to form grains and nuggets that collect in alluvial
deposits.[67]
Another recent study has claimed water in faults vaporizes during an earthquake, depositing gold.
When an earthquake strikes, it moves along a fault. Water often lubricates faults, filling in fractures
and jogs. About 10 kilometres (6.2 mi) below the surface, under incredible temperatures and
pressures, the water carries high concentrations of carbon dioxide, silica, and gold. During an
earthquake, the fault jog suddenly opens wider. The water inside the void instantly vaporizes,
flashing to steam and forcing silica, which forms the mineral quartz, and gold out of the fluids and
onto nearby surfaces.[68]
Seawater
The world's oceans contain gold. Measured concentrations of gold in the Atlantic and Northeast
Pacific are 50–150 femtomol/L or 10–30 parts per quadrillion (about 10–30 g/km3). In general, gold
concentrations for south Atlantic and central Pacific samples are the same (~50 femtomol/L) but less
certain. Mediterranean deep waters contain slightly higher concentrations of gold (100–150
femtomol/L) attributed to wind-blown dust and/or rivers. At 10 parts per quadrillion the
Earth's oceans would hold 15,000 tonnes of gold.[69] These figures are three orders of magnitude less
than reported in the literature prior to 1988, indicating contamination problems with the earlier data.
A number of people have claimed to be able to economically recover gold from sea water, but they
were either mistaken or acted in an intentional deception. Prescott Jernegan ran a gold-from-
seawater swindle in the United States in the 1890s, as did an English fraudster in the early 1900s.
[70]
Fritz Haber did research on the extraction of gold from sea water in an effort to help
pay Germany's reparations following World War I.[71] Based on the published values of 2 to 64 ppb of
gold in seawater a commercially successful extraction seemed possible. After analysis of 4,000
water samples yielding an average of 0.004 ppb it became clear that extraction would not be
possible and he stopped the project. [72]
History