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Gold/Mining/Energy : Gold and Silver Mining Stocks -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: grusum who wrote (2713)10/12/2001 9:37:07 AM
From: IngotWeTrust  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 4051
 
OT: Attacking people? I don't like physical gold-grubbing Muslims who attack America, Israel, their own countrymen. You attack me.

I don't like Claude's and Russ's patented pump and dump modus operandi. You attack me.

I don't post my two gold stock accumulations. You attack me.

I post input to your two public posts which you declared was your basic complaint with me. You attack me.

I answer your direct question about how I can be a gold miner and post frequently on some days during the day. You attack me.

I respond to everyone who attacks me, whether on topic or off topic. You attack the number of replies.

You forgot the Breadth Encompassing statement of this thread's mission/purpose statement. You attack me.

Your STYLE is.......

You criticize all of my posts as condescending. NOT

An embarrassment to your friends? Look in the mirror!

When you actually extend any olive branch to me, I'll respond. Bet you can't and won't.

gold_tutor



To: grusum who wrote (2713)11/10/2001 2:14:35 AM
From: grusum  Respond to of 4051
 
Embargoed for release until Thursday, Nov. 8, 2001, 1:30
p.m. EST, to coincide with presentation at the Geological
Society of America annual meeting in Boston.

MUCH GOLD, SILVER, OTHER METALS
MAY LIE UNDISCOVERED IN SAUDI ARABIA

BOSTON -- Oil may not be the only valuable commodity
buried beneath the sands of Saudi Arabia.

Ohio State University geologists have located new areas of
potential metal deposits, based on the analysis of more than
2,100 known occurrences of gold, silver, copper, and other
metals in the western third of the Saudi peninsula.

Geological sciences doctoral student
Abdulrahman Shujoon and his advisor,
Douglas Pride, professor of geological
sciences at Ohio State, analyzed more
than 260,000 square miles of variable
terrain in the country, an area roughly
equivalent to the size of Texas.

Shujoon used global information system
(GIS) software to pinpoint sites where
metals are likely to be found, based on
the age of rock, the shape of the terrain,
and the location of key mineral deposits
in the area.

"These models can be used to determine good targets for future
mineral exploration," Shujoon said.

Saudi Arabia supplies 11 percent of the world's oil from wells in
the northeastern part of the country, whereas the potential metal
deposits are clustered in western areas that have been mostly
overlooked because of their low potential for oil.

"These sites often contain large quantities of lower-grade metal
-- ideal for open-pit mining," Pride said.

Shujoon and Pride presented the findings November 8 in a
poster session at the Geological Society of America annual
meeting in Boston.

Among the proposed mineral sites are more than 300 square
miles of potential silver deposits, 3,000 square miles of potential
iron ore, 5,000 square miles of potential copper, and 5,000
square miles of potential gold.

Shujoon, a native of Saudi Arabia, hopes to put this information
to use when he graduates and returns home at the end of 2001.
After he obtains his doctorate from Ohio State, he will join the
faculty of King Abdulaziz University in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.

"I decided to begin this project because I felt that it could be of
great benefit to the geologists of my country, or any geologists
who might be interested in studying mineral exploration of Saudi
Arabia," Shujoon said.

After creating models with the GIS software, Shujoon used a
different software program, called "Search Map," to create maps
of Saudi Arabia with the potential metal deposits marked. Pride
and others at Ohio State are developing the Search Map
software for the analysis of geological data.

Pride said the same analysis techniques that Shujoon used for
this project could prove useful for finding metals in other
countries. Even today, prospectors tend to look for new
deposits in areas around old deposits, because they have little
other information to guide them. That strategy doesn't always
pay off, he said.

He cited many gold discoveries in China, Nevada and elsewhere
that were located in unlikely places far away from other
deposits.

"Knowing where metals have been found in the past helps us
establish the overall settings that help us find them in the future,"
he said. "That's where the GIS software and Search Map come
in."

#

Contact: Douglas Pride, (614) 292-9523; Pride.1@osu.edu

Written by Pam Frost Gorder, (614) 292-9475;
Gorder.1@osu.edu

osu.edu