Scientists find Yellowstone’s volcano is bigger than previously thought.
And there's more GOLD around its enormous rim than anyone knows. FIND IT.


GOLD is way up in value, 1300 an OUNCE. A palmful of nuggets can be a quarter million dollars. Where do we go to find it? Volcanic action creates gold coming to surface, these ancient calderas are a tremendous source of gold and gems. Yellowstone has a 'line up' of volcanoes which caused quartz/ iron/ gold bearing rock to be hurled up and out. I note that every Autumn, when summer's over, Metal Detectors are 139$ on sale and that's what you use to find nuggets.

An RV or VAN is required for sleeping and for shade a few CANVASES WITH POLES. A camp stove, lamp, benches, pillows, sleeping bags and dried foods assortment would be good. (See the SURVIVAL INDEX PAGE. ) TOOLS? A small pick is useful for gems and a shovel is required to dig the sand out of river beds, going low as gold sinks toward bedrock.

THE USUAL TOOLS FOR HITTING ROCKS. THE GEMS LIE IN THE SAND BETWEEN ROCKS.

To find GEMS, go to the mountains. Read what on gem finder does: http://gemhunter.webs.com/

To find GOLD you need a pan, a sliuce. You shovel the gravel at river bottom into your Sliuce and hit that sand and gravel with some running water and gold gets trapped in the ribbed mats. Watch all the PROSPECTING shows on Cable. CUZ GOLD IS IN all the rockiest MOUNTAINS. And at their 'bases.' You don't have to climb to 10,000 feet or dig caves into the sides of the peaks though that is productive. If you want to see YELLOWSTONE, stay at a camp OUTSIDE the NATIONAL PARK as you can't prospect inside of National Parks.

You google the mineral or gem you fancy and you'll find websites full of maps: http://www.travelchannel.com/interests/history/articles/top-10-treasure-hunting-hot-spots

I sought CALIFORNIA JADE, found this:

It's all over beaches near Big Sur and Monterey
One of you fishes for dinner, the other fills buckets with JADE!

TOURMALINE, AMETHYST, PERIDOT, CITRINE, TOPAZ and EMERALDS litter AMERICA!
DIG IN! A good place to dig is near mountains that were thrust up by volcanoes. We have such a place. It's the area between OREGON and WYOMING. Called IDAHO!

YELLOWSTONE IS WELL NAMED. IT IS FULL OF GOLD and it is a BOILING CALDERA
 From "The Extinction Protocol" website.

April 18, 2013 – SALT LAKE CITY — Yellowstone’s underground volcanic
plumbing is bigger and better connected than scientists thought,
researchers reported here today (April 17) at the Seismological Society
of America’s annual meeting. “We are getting a much better understanding
of the volcanic system of Yellowstone,” said Jamie Farrell, a seismology
graduate student at the University of Utah. “The magma reservoir is at
least 50 percent larger than previously imaged.” Knowing the volume of
molten magma beneath Yellowstone is important for estimating the size of
future eruptions, Farrell told OurAmazingPlanet. Geologists believe
Yellowstone sits over a hotspot, a plume of superheated rock rising from
Earth’s mantle. All of it bringing up gold and gems. And quartz. So stick
a spoon in this gigantic pudding and go to the gem shows to learn the value
of what you find. And approach the dealers with your finds.

As North America slowly drifted over the hotspot, the Yellowstone
plume punched through the continent’s crust, leaving a
bread-crumb-like trail of calderas created by massive volcanic eruptions
along Idaho’s Snake River Plain, leading straight to Yellowstone. The
last caldera eruption was 640,000 years ago. Smaller eruptions occurred
in between and after the big blasts, most recently about 70,000 years
ago. The magma chamber seen in the new study fed these smaller eruptions
and is the source of the park’s amazing hydrothermal springs and
geysers.

MOUNTAINS TOO- Also created, the surface uplift seen in the park, said Bob
Smith, a seismologist at the University of Utah and author of a related
study presented at the meeting. The volcanic plume of partly molten rock
that feeds the Yellowstone supervolcano. Yellow and red indicate higher
conductivity, green and blue indicate lower conductivity. Made by
University of Utah geophysicists and computer scientists, this is the
first large-scale ‘geoelectric’ image of the Yellowstone hotspot. “This
crustal magma body is a little dimple that creates the uplift,” Smith
said. “It’s like putting your finger under a rubber membrane and pushing
it up and the sides expand.”

A clearer picture of Yellowstone’s shallow magma chamber emerged
from earthquakes, whose waves change speed when
they travel through molten or solid rock. Farrell analyzed nearby
earthquakes to build a picture of the magma chamber. The underground
magma resembles a mutant banana, with a knobby, bulbous end poking up
toward the northeast corner of Yellowstone National Park, and the rest
of the tubular fruit angling shallowly southwest. It’s a single
connected chamber, about 37 miles (60 kilometers) long, 18 miles (30 km)
wide, and 3 to 7 miles (5 to 12 km) deep. Previously, researchers had
thought the magma beneath Yellowstone was in separate blobs, not a
continuous pocket. The shallowest magma, in the northeast, also matches
up with the park’s most intense hydro-thermal activity, Farrell said. The
new study is the best view yet of this zone, which lies outside the
youngest caldera rim. Additional molten rock, not imaged in this study,
also exists deeper beneath Yellowstone, scientists think. -Yahoo

http://theextinctionprotocol.wordpress.com:80/2013/04/18/scientists-find-yellowstones-volcano-is-bigger-than-thought/

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