Prospector
Gold is typically mined from two different types of geologic formations (known as deposits): lode deposits and placer deposits. Lode deposits are what prospectors dream of finding: large deposits of nearly pure gold. Such deposits are located where they were originally deposited by the mineral-bearing solutions that carried the gold up from the earth’s interior. Placer deposits, on the other hand, come from preexisting lode deposits that are exposed at the surface of the earth. These lode deposits’ exposure to the weather causes gold to be released from the surrounding rock and transported by rivers in the form of dust or flakes. When a stream carrying the gold slows, the gold collects in pockets of sand. Placer-deposit mines have historically been the source of approximately 35 percent of the total gold mined in the US. However, in recent years, the quantity of gold mined from such deposits has decreased as the readily accessible deposits have been exhausted. Thus, despite an increase in net gold mined, placer-deposit mining now accounts for only a few percent of total gold mined in the US.
For which one of the following questions concerning the time the passages were written does the information provided supply the clearest answer?
How much raw ore did the average lode-deposit mine process daily?
What was the total annual quantity of pure gold produced globally by placer-deposit mines?
What were the principal forms of environmental damage attributable to chemicals used to extract gold from raw ore?
What were the principal forms of environmental damage attributable to mining placer deposits?
What was the total annual quantity of gold mined in the US?