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Today β€” 21 November 2024Main stream

Ryan Eggold on Transforming Into a β€˜Psychopathic’ Serial Killer for β€˜Cross’ and Creating Ramsey’s β€˜Ken Doll’ Look

21 November 2024 at 01:03
SPOILER ALERT:Β This post contains spoilers for β€œCross,” now streaming on Prime Video. After playing the very likable Dr. Max Goodwin for five seasons of β€œNew Amsterdam,” Ryan Eggold was ready to jump into something new. While β€œnot necessarily looking for something darker,” Eggold was intrigued when β€œCross” showrunner Ben Watkins came to him with serial […]

Before yesterdayMain stream

Natural piezoelectric effect may build gold deposits

3 September 2024 at 18:37
Image of a white rock with gold and black deposits speckled throughout it.

Enlarge / A lot of gold deposits are found embedded in quartz crystals. (credit: Pierre Longnus)

One of the reasons gold is so valuable is because it is highly unreactiveβ€”if you make something out of gold, it keeps its lustrous radiance. Even when you can react it with another material, it's also barely soluble, a combination that makes it difficult to purify away from other materials. Which is part of why a large majority of the gold we've obtained comes from deposits where it is present in large chunks, some of them reaching hundreds of kilograms.

Those of you paying careful attention to the previous paragraph may have noticed a problem here: If gold is so difficult to get into its pure form, how do natural processes create enormous chunks of it? On Monday, a group of Australian researchers published a hypothesis, and a bit of evidence supporting it. They propose that an earthquake-triggered piezoelectric effect essentially electroplates gold onto quartz crystals.

The hypothesis

Approximately 75 percent of the gold humanity has obtained has come from what are called orogenic gold deposits. Orogeny is a term for the tectonic processes that build mountains, and orogenic gold deposits form in the seams where two bodies of rock are moving past each other. These areas are often filled with hot hydrothermal fluids, and the heat can increase the solubility of gold from "barely there" to "extremely low," meaning generally less than a single milligram in a liter of water.

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