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  2. Gold panning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gold_panning

    The batea, Spanish for "gold pan", [8] is a particular variant of gold pan. [6] Traditionally made of a solid piece of wood, [6] it may also be made of metal. Bateas are used in areas where there is less water available for use than with traditional gold pans, such as Mexico and South America, where it was introduced by the Spanish.

  3. GOLD - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GOLD

    Gold, a chemical element; Genomes OnLine Database; Global-scale Observations of the Limb and Disk, a NASA Explorer Mission of Opportunity; GOLD (parser), an open-source parser-generator of BNF-based grammars; Graduates of the Last Decade, an Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers program to garner more university level student members

  4. Metals of antiquity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metals_of_antiquity

    The earliest gold artifacts were discovered at the site of Wadi Qana in the Levant. [13] Silver is estimated to have been discovered in Asia Minor shortly after copper and gold. [14] There is evidence that iron was known from before 5000 BC. [15] The oldest known iron objects used by humans are some beads of meteoric iron, made in Egypt in ...

  5. Alchemical symbol - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alchemical_symbol

    The exact correlation varied over time, and in early centuries bronze or electrum were sometimes found instead of mercury, or copper for Mars instead of iron; however, gold, silver, and lead had always been associated with the Sun, Moon, and Saturn. [note 1] The associations below are attested from the 7th century and had stabilized by the 15th ...

  6. Suns in alchemy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suns_in_alchemy

    A green lion consuming the Sun is a common alchemical image and is seen in texts such as the Rosary of the Philosophers. The symbol is a metaphor for aqua regia (the green lion) consuming matter (the Sun), gold. In alchemical and Hermetic traditions, suns are used to symbolize a variety of concepts, much like the Sun in astrology.

  7. Ore genesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ore_genesis

    They are primarily made up of quartz veins also known as lodes or reefs, which contain either native gold or gold sulfides and tellurides. Lode gold deposits are usually hosted in basalt or in sediments known as turbidite , although when in faults , they may occupy intrusive igneous rocks such as granite .

  8. Wuxing (Chinese philosophy) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wuxing_(Chinese_philosophy)

    Wood/Spring: a period of growth, expanding which generates abundant vitality, movement and wind. Fire/Summer: a period of swollen, flowering, expanded with heat. Earth can be seen as a period of stillness transitioning between the other phases or seasons or when relating to transformative seasonal periods it can be seen as late Summer.

  9. Gold leaf - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gold_leaf

    The gold is taken out of the shoder and placed on a leather-covered surface. The gold is thin enough now that the cutter can simply blow on it to flatten it out. [clarification needed] Using a wooden implement called a wagon, the gold is quickly cut into four pieces and immediately placed in a packet called a mold for the final beating. [3]