I live in Canada more specifically Ontario. I’ve been a rockhound my whole life, and I can say that I have never found any of these gemstones in rivers which I frequently rockhound.
@@ssapp72 They dont, I'm a Missouri native rockhounding for 40 + years, you'll find flour gold in the mighty muddy Mississippi or Missouri rivers before you ever see a ruby or topaz in anything bigger than a grain of sand. This video is bunk.
Mountain rivers is where youd most likely find any. I live in N. Georgia and there is a river near me where you can find garnet pretty easy. I realize its garnet not ruby but theyre found in the same places.
Have jars of lovely pebbles. Live at the foot of the 2nd highest mountain in our county. Many fossils are found just laying on the mountainside(water/springs travel down). Much limestone. Our garden's at foot of mountain & we find red/black/white/yellow/brown/fools gold, etc stones. Wish I had the time to learn how to identify them! The red 'quartz' is especially lovely.
Thank you for the videos I really appreciate it I’m starting my journey to learn search and find so I’ll be watching and following great job and thank you for sharing
When you're looking for diamonds it's worth having a streak plate, everytime I was sure I had found one and it was too small to scratch test the streak plate revealed it was only a tiny piece of polished glass
they're very nice, you're true for what you have said. the problem is, its only a few country makes a shape or cutting this rock and not even a buyer, negative. unlike gold. buyer are everywhere. gems, you can't even find where to bring and cut them. in Asia, it's in Thailand where all this neighboring country bringing in here and even i guest from Africa or around world.. the cutting and shaping are in this country. They have also a gemologist laboratory who can bring a certificate for the original stone. So, gems is RARE once they're finished.. expensive. It's created by the ARTISAN,, people.. 4c's by means of price.. so highly cheap to highly expensive
Any rivers in the US? Some must be more prevalent in certain areas or are these the three most common in all rivers? I love treasure hunting, especially for rocks, crystals, gemstones!
Greetings, Can anyone here watching this tell me "What's the name of the stylized cut @ the two minute mark?" And no it's not a Trillion nor is it a Shield Cut... Thank you in advance for your efforts on my behalf!
"Any river"? I wonder if you've ever tried searching the Saint John's River in FL. Lots of sand, mud, plants, bugs, and alligators...not really any gems. Even most beaches in the state are sandy with few instances of gravel and that is mostly comprised of shell fragments, not stones. If you're extremely lucky, you might run across a quartz but the local geology is not conducive for gem hunting. To be fair, FL has a few caves and caverns but if you're looking for topaz or corundum, you're pretty much hoping to find someone's lost jewelry. WHERE you search makes a huge difference.
There is lots of incorrect info in this video. It's aggravating because its unnecessary. The click baity, "any river" in the title is just the beginning of the "mistakes".
You can get the Gemology book for beginners at the following link➡: hotm.art/Gemology-book
If they can be found in any river, they certainly aren't rare.
Any river - not every river!
I live in Canada more specifically Ontario. I’ve been a rockhound my whole life, and I can say that I have never found any of these gemstones in rivers which I frequently rockhound.
I was looking for a dissenting comment. I never RockHounded. But I'm skeptical of this A.I. Narrated Video.
@@rockcrazygal5166 I’m having a hard time believing these are hanging out in the Mississippi near me too….
@rockcrazygal5166 Yep. I've worked on, and fished, & dug in rocks my entire life in rivers. I've only found a couple of gems & crystals.
@@ssapp72 You won't find anything in that Mississippi mud, lol.
@@ssapp72 They dont, I'm a Missouri native rockhounding for 40 + years, you'll find flour gold in the mighty muddy Mississippi or Missouri rivers before you ever see a ruby or topaz in anything bigger than a grain of sand. This video is bunk.
Mountain rivers is where youd most likely find any. I live in N. Georgia and there is a river near me where you can find garnet pretty easy. I realize its garnet not ruby but theyre found in the same places.
These gems CAN'T be found in any river, unless it's someplace like Brazil or Madagascar.
Have jars of lovely pebbles. Live at the foot of the 2nd highest mountain in our county. Many fossils are found just laying on the mountainside(water/springs travel down). Much limestone. Our garden's at foot of mountain & we find red/black/white/yellow/brown/fools gold, etc stones. Wish I had the time to learn how to identify them! The red 'quartz' is especially lovely.
@blacktara3936 would love to Go through your area , what state "&" County? That has a lot to tell the different regions post up different minerals !!!
Quartz … yea that probably what I got on my river bank
Thank you for your explanation ❤❤❤ watching from the Philippines
What time of the day regarding the sun’s reflection is the best time for hunting gems? I’m glad for the polarized glasses tip, thank you!
Afternoon after the rain
nature beautiful watching from uk granny eileen
Hello Sir, Very Knowledgeable Video. Thank you very much.❤
When you say US do you mean N America or just south of the 49th parallel?
Good video direct to gems 👍👏
Thanks buddy
Thank you for the videos I really appreciate it I’m starting my journey to learn search and find so I’ll be watching and following great job and thank you for sharing
Very Interesting - Thanks !
👍
What about dry streams, Is there a chance of finding precious gemstones?
Thank you
Yes, it's a very good place
@CaboDaNau thank you
When you're looking for diamonds it's worth having a streak plate, everytime I was sure I had found one and it was too small to scratch test the streak plate revealed it was only a tiny piece of polished glass
they're very nice, you're true for what you have said. the problem is, its only a few country makes a shape or cutting this rock and not even a buyer, negative. unlike gold. buyer are everywhere. gems, you can't even find where to bring and cut them. in Asia, it's in Thailand where all this neighboring country bringing in here and even i guest from Africa or around world.. the cutting and shaping are in this country. They have also a gemologist laboratory who can bring a certificate for the original stone. So, gems is RARE once they're finished.. expensive. It's created by the ARTISAN,, people.. 4c's by means of price.. so highly cheap to highly expensive
I once found a small price of Petrified wood beside my school 🏫
👍👍👍👍 very good video
Thanks
Great vid
Thanks
Hello, I would like to ask you something, can the glass of a rum bottle scratch carnelian?
No
That level of rarity isn’t raring
Any rivers in the US? Some must be more prevalent in certain areas or are these the three most common in all rivers? I love treasure hunting, especially for rocks, crystals, gemstones!
lets see what scotland has to offer!
Let's Get it
Greetings, Can anyone here watching this tell me "What's the name of the stylized cut @ the two minute mark?" And no it's not a Trillion nor is it a Shield Cut... Thank you in advance for your efforts on my behalf!
"Any river"? I wonder if you've ever tried searching the Saint John's River in FL. Lots of sand, mud, plants, bugs, and alligators...not really any gems. Even most beaches in the state are sandy with few instances of gravel and that is mostly comprised of shell fragments, not stones. If you're extremely lucky, you might run across a quartz but the local geology is not conducive for gem hunting. To be fair, FL has a few caves and caverns but if you're looking for topaz or corundum, you're pretty much hoping to find someone's lost jewelry. WHERE you search makes a huge difference.
thanks por info
Great videos thank you for the information
Thanks my friend
In some rivers you can find pre-coprolites floating down on top
@@jameslewis1605 those same rivers have brown trout that hit on corn
I have somany difrent stons but i dont have the exact toul to test it
Great videos, but if you translate the explanation into Arabic, you will find a lot of followers. I swear, try it, you won't lose anything.
I'll try it
Rare yet in any river ...
The most important tip: You DO NOT want to be looking for gemstones in any river in Africa. 🐊
How to stone cleaning chemical
After reading a few comments it seems this video isn't worth watching.
Don’t think you’re gonna get rich looking for these ! 😂
@@MichaelC76x
That's not true - here in Germany you can definitely find gold powder in the Danube ...
❤
There is lots of incorrect info in this video. It's aggravating because its unnecessary. The click baity, "any river" in the title is just the beginning of the "mistakes".
فيديوهات را
Another channel and video with this same voice that contains 3 minutes of information surrounded by 10 minutes of useless verbosity. Ain't AI great?
I only use IA voice, but the script and video editing are made by human hands
I call BS!