A person can spot a gold nugget by gold mining in areas where gold is prevalent. A person may also utilize a metal detector when they are mining for gold.
Well, depends on who your are asking and how pure it is. If you were selling it and you scrapped it, the price would be about 4/5 or less of spot, again depending on how pure your nugget is. You can get up to spot for some nuggets. It all depends on the charactor.
a gold nugget is a non-mineral
The color of a gold nugget is usually a bright, yellowish color.
nugget and sometimes kernel.
No, a gold nugget is not a compound. It is a naturally occurring solid element made of pure gold.
It's a random chance of getting a Gold Nugget. You can get them by hitting a rock that's not normal in your town or buy a Silver Shovel and hit the rocks in your town. (like you'd normally do to get Bells from rocks) Sometimes, instead of Bells, ores will appear and a Gold Nugget can appear along with that group.
You take the gold nugget to nabooti island and go to the traders. In return for the gold nugget, they wil give you something to help you finish the game.
Depends on the size of the nugget. In 1849 gold was about $20.67 per ounce.
The nugget's worth will vary. Get used to the idea. It may be worth more as a "whole nugget" than for the gold it contains, but a collector would have to be willing to pay for it. There are a lot of variables that affect its value as a collectible. Here are some other things to consider. A gold nugget isn't pure gold. It is common for gold to have a bit of silver and/or copper as an alloy in the nugget. Naturally there is no way to know without a bit of assay work. And that costs a bit of money. Not only is the gold content of the nugget variable, so is the price of gold. It varies hourly during the time the gold markets are open. A link is provided so you can look at the spot price of gold. Use the index to find the unit of weight you wish to look up (gram, ounce, etc.). Then you can look up the per-unit-weight spot price in any major currency, including Australian dollars.
The current market price for gold is around $1,400 per ounce. That is referred to as the "spot" price. There are 28 standard grams per ounce and 32 Troy ounces. If you base the calculation on standard ounces, then the spot value is approximately $200. However, most individuals cannot get spot price from dealers. Most dealers pay a percentage of the day's spot price. Selling the individual nugget can get more than spot due to their collectible value.
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