answersLogoWhite

0


Best Answer

You need a pan something that has little holes like net-like [metal or plastic] Water and a shovel;If your going to mine it though you will need a pickaxe.

User Avatar

Wiki User

13y ago
This answer is:
User Avatar

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: What material do you use to dig up gold?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Related questions

How do you get material on harvest moon?

For wood: you have to chop logs that are scattered on the floor For stone: use a hammer to smash rocks or boulders For gold: dig it up in the mines


How do you dig up gold?

Gold can be found by using items such as shovels, gold pans, and sluice buckets.


How do you use dig in a sentence?

i dig up all my weeds from my garden


What did people use to dig up gold?

People used pick shovels, and gold pans to sample the dirt to check for traces of gold. Later sluice buckets were established once gold was found. Later years brought about the use of explosives and larger equipment when possible.


Why were the gold diggers called diggers?

The gold diggers were called diggers because they dug. Dig?


Where was hernan Cortes desire destination?

He wanted to go to the Americas, to dig up gold.


Does flygon learn dig naturally?

No, Flygon cannot learn Dig by leveling up. You will need to use the TM to teach it Dig.


How did NZ miners dig up gold?

they used strategies like panning an other stuff


What did they use in building Panama Canal?

they had to dig it up


Where is copper found alone in nature?

In the ground. It is a metal that must be dug up and processed or purified to be of any use like gold or silver or zinc. They dig up metals like copper in Mines.


What does you use to dig up gold?

pans, pickaxes,shovels, and more. by pulverzing,panning,cradling,dredging,tomming,shaft mining,puddling,dry blowing that is all i know


How deep do you have to dig to reach gold?

Often, you won't need to dig at all. Gold has been found in rivers and streams in the US as far back as Native American tribes, long before the California Gold Rush 1840s. However, gold can also be "dug" up as far down as bedrock or the topmost frozen layer, such in Alaska. In the Bering Sea, divers in special suits that protect them from the icy cold water use suction equipment to find gold flecks in the sea floor sediment---no digging needed. Some companies use heavy equipment to dig up the sea floor, bring the dirt to the surface, where it can be sorted to find the gold. Most gold is found as tiny, thin flecks or very small nuggets, unlike other precious gems.