I Found a Desert Waterfall Loaded With Placer Gold!

I followed a hidden desert canyon using Google Earth and a set of “secret numbers” to look for a dry desert waterfall that could be hiding placer gold — and the geology started looking better the farther I went. Then I vacuumed the bedrock cracks, panned the black sand, and found the clue that told me this spot is worth coming back to. In this episode, I show you how I search for placer gold in dry desert washes and waterfall traps by reading the ground: black sand, hematite staining, granite, biotite mica, quartz, feldspars, hornblende, fault breccia, contact zones, hardpack gravels, old tertiary channels, and bedrock cracks where heavy gold can drop out of the flow. Using a small field vacuum, I sampled the cracks and pockets in the waterfall bedrock, then followed the wash upstream looking for the source. Along the way, I found mineralized rock, trumpet plants growing in heavily mineralized soil, ancient water-worn gravels, and a possible old channel system worth coming back to when the desert cools down. Then we panned it out… and yes, there was gold. Watch closely because I also explain why rough gold is such an important clue, what it can tell you about how far the gold traveled, and why you should always keep your samples labeled and separate when testing multiple spots in the field. 40+ years of geology and prospecting experience put to work in the desert — so you can find more gold and avoid getting robbed by a lack of knowledge. ⏱️ CHAPTERS 0:00 Looking for lost waterfalls of gold 0:25 Hiking into the desert canyon 0:43 Trumpet plants and mineralized soil 0:47 Using Google Earth and “secret numbers” 1:23 Reading the geology: mica, quartz, feldspar and hematite 2:32 Black sand in the wash 3:02 First dry waterfall sample area 3:23 Fault breccia and mineralized rock 4:02 Vacuuming bedrock cracks and pockets 5:21 Bagging the first waterfall sample 6:10 Following the wash upstream 6:25 Second waterfall and gold-catching pockets 7:46 Contact zones and hardpack gravels 8:09 Hematite-rich material worth sampling 9:03 Artificial bedrock and possible tertiary source 9:27 Big boulders and ancient water flow 10:05 Lunch break in the desert heat 10:38 Why water and electrolytes matter 11:38 Giant rocks moved by powerful water 12:29 Sampling old tertiary channel gravels 13:15 Bedding planes and granite contact zones 14:03 Hematite outcrop in the saddle 14:18 Trumpet plants growing on mineralized ground 14:51 Inspecting samples with a hand lens 15:50 Finding water and panning the samples 17:00 Black sand and first gold flakes 17:23 Rough gold and what it means 17:41 Why you should never mix samples 18:04 Patreon gold giveaway and final thoughts 🔔 SUBSCRIBE for more gold prospecting, geology lessons, desert exploring, and old-school mining adventures every Saturday. 💰 JOIN THE PATREON for paydirt giveaways, mining equipment giveaways, behind-the-scenes location breakdowns, and Premium Patron adventures:   / askjeffwilliams   👉 Check out my wife’s channel — Lila and Jeff 🔎 Research tools I use: Google Earth, USGS maps, and MyLandMatters.org for claim research. ⚠️ Desert prospecting can be dangerous, especially in extreme heat. Always bring plenty of water, electrolytes, proper gear, and research land status and mining claims before prospecting. This video is for recreational prospecting and educational geology. #placergold #goldprospecting #desertgold #findinggold #goldmining #googleearthgold #crevicingforgold #goldpanning #askjeffwilliams #jeffwilliams