WATER INTO GOLD


Earthquakes turn water into gold, according to a new theory by scientists at the Australian National University in Canberra. Water in faults vaporizes during an earthquake, depositing gold, according to a model published in the March 17 Nature Geoscience journal. One of the quests of the ancient alchemists.  A small company near Paris has pioneered technology which can "turn water into gold." Earthquakes Turn Water Into Gold. When the Earth shakes, water vaporizes, salting underground fractures with gold. An earthquake turns water into gold in mere seconds, according to a March 17 Inquisitor report . Earthquakes make gold veins in an instant. gold can be deposited in Earth's crust almost instantaneously during earthquakes. Earthquakes cause water in fault lines to vaporize, leaving a deposit of gold, according to the study. gold can be deposited in Earth's crust "almost instantaneously" during earthquakes. A small French start-up company is selling a technology with a hint of alchemy: turning water into gold. 'The process for taking gold from sea water is no more difficult, Sea water contains about 0.1-2 mg/tonne of gold dissolved in water. Though seawater contains between 0.1 to 2 mg/ton of gold, depending on the location, it cannot be extracted profitably. A Chennai-based scientist, Joy Prakash Agarwala, has claimed that he has developed a technology that can extract gold from sea waterA Chennai-based scientist, Joy Prakash Agarwala, has claimed that he has developed a technology that can extract gold from sea water. Jernegan claimed to have invented a method of cheaply extracting gold from sea water. Search for the truth and myth of golden sea and gold in sea water is still on.The successful attempt to extract gold from sea water are not fruitful. The Electrolytic Marine Salts Company, organized for the purpose of extracting gold from sea water, which has been brought into great prominence. Prescott F. Jernegan claimed to have invented a method of extracting gold from sea water. The device used, called the Gold Accumulator.