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In January 1848, a carpenter in
California found some flakes of gold
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in the waterway supplying the
sawmill where he was working.
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It was a lucky find, and before long,
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thousands of other hopeful prospectors and thieves
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descended on the area
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to find their own golden treasure.
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Thus began the Californian Gold Rush,
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which saw more than 300 tonnes
of gold extracted from the area
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around the Sacramento River.
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While seeking their fortunes,
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prospecting hopefuls needed to
be careful they weren’t tricked.
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Fool’s gold, a shiny yellow
metallic mineral called pyrite,
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was everywhere.
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And it wasn’t worth a dime,
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especially compared to the
gold in them thar hills..
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But as it turns out,
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there was another kind of fool’s
gold out there called chalcopyrite,
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meaning there were twice as
many tricks to watch out for.
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These were the days before fancy chemical tests,
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they needed a rough and ready field test
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to tell them they’d gotten the good stuff.
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And it turns out that this is the
simplest and most effective test.
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[intro music]
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The California gold rush ultimately brought about a quarter of a million hopefuls
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to the area,
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hoping to strike it rich.
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But gold fever wasn’t limited to America.
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Around the same time, Australia
experienced its own gold rush,
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and all through the second
half of the 19th Century,
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gold hunters flocked to
locations in Canada, South Africa
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and elsewhere in America at
the first whiff of a gold find.
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Prospectors had to be reactive,
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because it was hard to predict
where the gold would be.
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Gold can be found in lots of different settings,
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can exist as tiny flakes or giant nuggets,
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and might show up in streams and lakes
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or still be embedded in the rock itself.
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It’s a moving target.
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Part of the problem is how gold
gets to the places we find it.
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See, gold is first deposited in hydrothermal veins
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that cut through existing rocks.
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But it tends to be in small
quantities and really spread out,
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so it’s easy to miss.
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But when those veins get
weathered and the gold washes out,
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it gets redeposited in river and lake
sediments called placer deposits.
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And here, among modern and ancient sediments,
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is where you can find amounts
of gold worth your time.
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The thing is, the geological processes
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that help to concentrate
gold into valuable deposits
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also tend to gather together other minerals,
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like pyrite and its cousin chalcopyrite.
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Chalcopyrite is the fool’s
gold you’ve never heard of.
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It’s similar to pyrite, which has
isometric crystals made of iron and sulfur,
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but it has extra copper in it,
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which makes these tetragonal crystals
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that like to grow together into one another.
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When chalcopyrite reacts with oxygen in the air,
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it can also turn a bunch of psychedelic
colors, from green to peacock purple.
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But in its natural un-oxidized
state, it’s a brassy gold.
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Not only is it gold in color,
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but it’s pretty soft as far as minerals go.
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You can scratch it with a copper coin,
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which means it can look about as soft
as real gold to the untrained eye.
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Both pyrite and chalcopyrite occur alongside gold
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in old hydrothermal systems,
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where metal rich fluids have
flowed through existing rock
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and left behind their mineral treasure.
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It’s little wonder that these two fool’s golds
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have wound up confusing optimistic prospectors.
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Like Jaques Cartier.
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Cartier - no relation to the French jewelry guy -
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was exploring the St. Lawrence
River in Canada, in the 1540s,
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when he found what he thought
to be gold and diamonds.
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It was only when he got his
treasures home to France
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that he discovered that it was
just a bunch of quartz and pyrite.
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So it goes to show that real people
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have been actually fooled
by these lookalike minerals.
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Huge Bummer dude
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And even during the later gold
rushes of the 19th Century,
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prospectors would have needed
quick ways of distinguishing trash
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from treasure in the field.
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So, in lieu of any fancy geochemical analysis,
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rock hunters could have used a streak test,
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to tell all of their shiny golden minerals apart.
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All you need to do is treat
your rock like a crayon.
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Just drag it along an unglazed
white ceramic surface,
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and look at the color of the streak left behind.
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And you might be surprised,
because a mineral’s streak
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isn’t always the same colour
as the rest of the crystal.
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That’s because the color of a crystal
depends as much on geometric structure
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as it does the chemistry.
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Minerals like opal and labradorite
owe much of their color
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to the way light bends through their structure.
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And trace elements contaminants
can also throw off the color too.
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For instance, calcite is a mineral
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that comes in lots of colors
depending on what trace impurities
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are caught up in the crystal,
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but no matter the color of the whole piece,
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its streak will always be white.
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So doodling with your rock removes the
diffraction and contamination factors,
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meaning that the streak color
will be the same no matter what.
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Of course, the streak test only works
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if your mineral is softer than the
ceramic tile you're dragging it across,
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so about a 7 on the Mohs hardness scale.
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If they’re not, then all you’d
get is a scratch in your tile.
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Which, conveniently enough,
applies to all kinds of gold -
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foolish or otherwise.
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are all lower than seven on the moh's hardness scale
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Even though gold and its lookalikes all
have softish, shiny yellow crystals,
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they have different colored streaks.
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Gold, fittingly, leaves a golden
yellow streak on the plate.
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On the other hand, pyrite’s streak
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is a greenish, somewhat metallic black.
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And as for chalcopyrite?
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The streak is greenish black, just like pyrite.
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All it takes is a ceramic tile and a pair of eyes!
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And while chalcopyrite might not have been
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what the gold rush prospectors wanted to find,
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it’s not exactly trash, either.
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Today, it’s one of the main
ores for all the copper
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we use in our pipes, wires, and construction.
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It’s also used to make sulfuric acid,
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which has a role in fertilisers
and industrial chemistry.
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And places like Copperfields Mine in Ontario
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and Olympic Dam in Australia
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are now better known for their
copper-bearing chalcopyrite
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than for the gold that’s found alongside them!
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Who’s the fool now?
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What’s even better,
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Rocks Box subscribers get a piece
of this beautiful golden mineral
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with its green-black streak, right to their door.
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Every month we pick out a
special mineral or fossil
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with a story to tell and send them your way.
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If you wanna get on the
waitlist or peruse our shop
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from some of our greatest hits of the past,
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head over to SciShow.rocks or
click the link in the description.
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Thanks for watching!
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[ OUTRO ]