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Fool's Gold

2023-09-19 06:08:25

I am sitting on a dry mottle lawn in front of my house, I want to know you, and if so, why all unsolved problems and all unknown motives. When you perform your great fading behavior as a temporary Houdini, you are well placed to put excuses in your Levis porous back pocket. If I know magic, I will bring you back to the stage. That is it: it is always waiting for me waiting for sitting and waiting for the temperature of the black coffee pool in your eyes to be inadequate ... read.

In the winter of 1994, when my wife and I stopped by a rock shop in Holbrook, Arizona, I bought a stupid gold of Robert Sikorsky. (This book has been reissued, the title is for pursuing Dutch gold.) I rarely know that this book will change my way of living. Several minutely cut images, some Spanish words (misspellings), heart-shaped notches, heart-shaped mosaics, and obvious map lines and symbols are drawn. These stones are said to be mysteriously discovered in the superstitious mountains of the mid-20th century and are said to be the key to the legendary lost Dutchman.

In the Gold Rush of Kalgoorlie (Australia) in the 1890s, numerous mineral rocks (gold bismuth compounds), which are not known cynically, were identified as stupid gold. These sediments are used as inexpensive building materials and are used to fill holes and ruts. A few years later, after the mineral was identified, there was a small rush of money to dig the street. Given the events in a few seconds, John Kennedy's last conversation was ironical. "We can not say that President Dallas does not love you," Kennedy replied.

Natural gold is very small for fine particles embedded in rocks and usually occurs in quartz or sulfide minerals such as "Fur Gold" (pyrite). These are known as deposits of deposits. Metals in nature are also found in the form of free flakes, granules, or larger nuggets, eroded from rocks and eventually forming alluvial deposits called sandstone deposits. This free gold is always abundantly contained on the surface of the gold-containing vein, as it involves oxidation of minerals, weathering from it, and washing away the gathered streams into rivers.