On this forum, and many other similar ones, I see a lot of questions about sensors, targets, and methods. Most of these questions could be answered quite easily with a very basic understanding of geophysics. I have no expectation that the average person on this or other similar treasure hunting forums has any background in geophysics, not have they probably ever heard of it as a discipline. This doesn’t surprise me in the least as I hadn’t heard of geophysics as a discipline until my junior year of my undergraduate degree in engineering physics at a small liberal arts college. After that I went on to get a masters degree in geophysical engineering and a PhD in geophysics from the Colorado School of Mines (CSM) which has the oldest geophysics department in the world.
My thesis statement after 25 years of near surface geophysics experience and lots of time both doing and reading about treasure hunting is the:
”All treasure hunting is an application of near surface geophysics. Any type of target that you are looking for is probably similar to targets that geophysicists look for every single day using instruments designed to take advantage of everything that we know about the physics of the shallow subsurface. The data is interpreted with software used to extract as much information as possible from the data that we have collected.”
What is the best way to share the knowledge that exists in my discipline with the average treasure hunter without any expectation that they are going to read the bookshelves full of math, physics, geophysics, electrical engineering, and other related topics?
I have offered to give presentations on many of these topics to local treasure hunting clubs in the Denver metro area in the past with essentially no interest from the clubs members.
I could do presentations that I put on YouTube if that is the best way.
Ryan E. North, PhD, PgP, RPG, GISP
Principal Geophysicist
ISC Geoscience
2420 Colorado Blvd #597
Idaho Springs, CO 80452
601-831-5832
[email protected]
My thesis statement after 25 years of near surface geophysics experience and lots of time both doing and reading about treasure hunting is the:
”All treasure hunting is an application of near surface geophysics. Any type of target that you are looking for is probably similar to targets that geophysicists look for every single day using instruments designed to take advantage of everything that we know about the physics of the shallow subsurface. The data is interpreted with software used to extract as much information as possible from the data that we have collected.”
What is the best way to share the knowledge that exists in my discipline with the average treasure hunter without any expectation that they are going to read the bookshelves full of math, physics, geophysics, electrical engineering, and other related topics?
I have offered to give presentations on many of these topics to local treasure hunting clubs in the Denver metro area in the past with essentially no interest from the clubs members.
I could do presentations that I put on YouTube if that is the best way.
Ryan E. North, PhD, PgP, RPG, GISP
Principal Geophysicist
ISC Geoscience
2420 Colorado Blvd #597
Idaho Springs, CO 80452
601-831-5832
[email protected]
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