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Jim Sanders, identified as a San Francisco businessman, provided a picture to The Union newspaper of a 9-pound nugget he said he found on property owned by his family. The newspaper agreed not to identify the precise location of the discovery.Sanders told the paper he also found two other large nuggets, one 10 ounces and another 8 ounces. He said a professional survey of the property showed there's a lot more where those came from in an area of past hydraulic mining.Local jeweler Terry Mohr hadn't seen the nugget, but was impressed nonetheless at the reported size, which he said would make it worth well over $100,000.
http://www.news10.net/news/story.aspx?storyid=80576&catid=2&plckFindCommentKey=CommentKey:d762e2ac-3578-4976-b388-f8dbeb68547e#CommentKey:d762e2ac-3578-4976-b388-f8dbeb68547eDon't let Obama hear this... he'll start looking for a way to tax the guy
I assumed "mineral rights" referred to below-ground minerals. Do rocks laying on the top of the soil fall under that category?
I'm getting hazy on my local history and lazy too. I beleve it was a 17 pound nugget found in N.C. (Charlotte) back in the late 1700's or early 1800's....google Reed mine for details.....oh...and the dude used it for a door stop and then sold it for $3.50.Oh yeah and they just announced last week that they're reopening the "Haile" gold mine again. It's about 15 miles down the road. The "Haile" has been one of the most productive mines east of the Mississippi. At one time it furnished all the gold to the government mint. Several other minerals have been mined from the Haile mine.
I was told that some of the played out gold mines in the UP of Michigan are now looking for fools gold as it is used in [electronics.? ]