Crevicing: robbing the cracks properly
Crevicing is where prospecting gets less romantic and more surgical. You stop admiring the creek as scenery and start looking at bedrock like a lock full of trapped heavies. Gold loves cracks for one very boring reason: once it drops into the right crevice, getting moved again takes a lot more force. Your job is to find the right cracks, clean them properly, and stop pretending half-done scraping counts as testing a spot.
The best crevice is usually the one lazy people skip
Shallow obvious cracks get attention. Tight, awkward, ugly, heavy-packed cracks are often where the better lesson — and sometimes the better gold — sits.
Bedrock is where the sorting game gets serious
Loose gravel can keep shifting around. Bedrock is where movement starts getting interrupted properly. Once heavy material hits a hard bottom, every crack, seam, pothole, pocket, and step-down becomes a possible trap. Gold drops, wedges, packs in with black sand and other heavies, and can stay there long after lighter material has been scoured away.
If you find bedrock in a gold-bearing creek and ignore the cracks, you are skipping the bit that most deserves suspicion.
- It cuts across flow or creates a real interruption, not just a decorative scratch
- It widens or deepens in spots where heavies can settle
- It has packed black sand, compact gravel, clay, or iron-rich crud inside it
- It sits below a natural riffle, drop, boulder, or other energy change
- It connects to low points, pockets, or little bedrock basins nearby
A crack with ugly heavy-packed rubbish in it is often more promising than a clean pretty crack everybody can see from ten metres away.
Clean it like you actually want the answer
Brush off loose sand and gravel first so you can see what the crack is doing. You are reading structure before you start digging blindly.
That often gives you access into the trap direction and helps you understand how material has packed itself in.
Crevice tools, screwdrivers, hooks, spoons, suckers, and snuffer-style recovery tricks matter because gold often hides in narrow spots your fingers and big shovel cannot properly reach.
If one crack is producing and the next is dead, you want to notice the pattern instead of mashing everything into one mystery bucket.
Crevice dirt is exactly where fine gold and dense little bits can hide. Treat the concentrate like it matters, because it does.
People give up after the first shallow scrape
A crack is either cleaned or it is still a question mark. Beginners often flick a bit of loose stuff out, see no immediate prize, and move on. Meanwhile the packed material deeper in the crack — the bit doing the actual trapping — stays put. That is not testing. That is fidgeting.
Crevicing rewards stubborn thoroughness, not dramatic first impressions.
Work the crack until the trap logic disappears
Keep going until you have removed the compacted heavies, hit clean hard surfaces, or reached the point where the crack stops being a meaningful trap. If the material changes as you go deeper — more black sand, more packed gravel, more clay — pay attention. That change is telling you where the sorting got serious.
The crack does not owe you visible gold at the top. Sometimes the money zone is the annoying bit further in.
- Cracks below rapids, little drops, and natural riffles
- Seams behind and below large embedded boulders
- Low points where several tiny cracks feed into one pocket
- Bedrock edges near inside-bend slowdown zones
- Cracks holding black sand bands or compact clay-rich heavies
Look for combinations. A crack plus a slowdown plus a hard bottom plus heavy concentrate clues is better than any one clue on its own.
- Ignoring narrow awkward cracks because they are annoying to work
- Mixing all crevice material together before you know what produced
- Leaving black-sand-packed bottoms because they look like effort
- Scraping only what is visible from above
- Treating every crack as equal instead of reading the bigger trap context
Crevicing is not random cleaning. It is targeted theft from the creek’s best little hiding spots.
Good crevicing is just patient burglary guided by physics
Gold falls into cracks because gravity and water sorted it there. You recover it by being more methodical than the average impatient human, not by looking heroic on a rock.
If the crack still holds packed heavies, you are not done. You are just tired.