dannan14 wrote:i think you have to be correct about the sea floor. The gold dredging reality show proves that a lot of gold has made its way down the streams and rivers to the sea. The cost and difficulty of extracting it is the big issue.
SoFa wrote:From the USGS reply, it sounds like there is going to be plenty of silver for a long time.
scrapper2010 wrote:SoFa wrote:From the USGS reply, it sounds like there is going to be plenty of silver for a long time.
That's what I got out of it too.
Copper Catcher wrote:
...... or more commonly, they may continue to increase as additional deposits (known or recently discovered) are developed, or currently exploited deposits are more thoroughly explored and/or new technology or economic variables improve their economic feasibility.
......For example, in 1970, identified and undiscovered world copper resources were estimated ...............reserves of about 280 million metric tons of copper. ........but world copper reserves in 2010 were estimated to be 630 million metric tons of copper, more than double those in 1970, despite the depletion by mining of more than the original reserves estimate.
......... A report in the December 2007 issue of Platts Metals Week noted that a vice president ..... pointed out that the company’s Lucky Friday Mine has operated for 50 years, rarely with a projected mine life of more that 4 or 5 years
jtlee321 wrote:dannan14 wrote:i think you have to be correct about the sea floor. The gold dredging reality show proves that a lot of gold has made its way down the streams and rivers to the sea. The cost and difficulty of extracting it is the big issue.
I know there is a lot of gold just off of the coast lines being deposited by erosion. What I am talking about is the amount of gold and silver that has never been above sea level. I know the cost to extract it would be high. But the amount available would have to be incredible. My point is it would have to be cheaper and easier to mine the ocean floor then to start exploring space for these minerals.
everything wrote: we don't seem to worried about oil running out, so I doubt silver would run out either.
everything wrote:I was being cynical about the oil situation. I have many questions about this topic myself, I've been trying to read up on some stuff from mining geologists, they are the ones who run the numbers that go to the managers to project, or sell.
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