Rarer than rare earths, the trials and tribulations of tellurium
https://investorintel.com/sectors/technology-metals/technology-metals-intel/tellurium-trials-tribulations/
It seemed an apt moment for me to revisit Tellurium, a metal I have watched over the years and yet with which little has been done despite its high value and immense scarcity. While other specialty metals boomed and busted, Tellurium never left the runway in the first place despite its fortunes being intimately linked with those of the solar energy sector.
So, I'm reading this article about element 52, Tellurium, It is rarer than rare, so that seems like the TRUMP CARD of elements to me. But this 2014 article is rather negative. And then I get to an interesting bit…
This Gryphon Gold is (was?) a US-based mine development company which had (has?) as its principal asset the 23.5 square mile Borealis property located in the Walker Lane gold belt of Western Nevada. The company was formed as a private entity in 2003. In December of 2005 Gryphon Gold was taken public and traded on the Toronto Stock Exchange and the OTCBB in the United States.The reason we mention this company is that its Nevada mine is one of the few places in the world with the mineral nagyagite, otherwise known as black tellurium.In June 2011 it began construction of the Borealis Oxide Heap Leach Mine. In rather short order (September 2011) it began the heap leaching process by dripping cyanide solution onto the first constructed heap.
The article goes on to how they perfect the process for extracting gold and tellurium. And then fade away.
Almonds tingling… my Spidey sense tells me that names like Gryphon matter
The Cabal love their symbolism and the Gryphon was the creature who stored gold in it's nests in the Far Eastern deserts where the Scythians extracted it and brought it to Europe. Although the ruling trib of the Scythians spoke a Turkic language, they had lots of allied tribes in their empire and many of them were Iranians, spread all the way from Persia, to the north of the Himalayas to China.
Is it possible, that they secretly moved the process to secret mines in Iran?
Let's look…
No nagyagite' mines shown in Iran but just north in Armenia and Azerbaijan we have some. Could it be that these mineral seams extend south into Iran? Investigation needed, and maybe even on the ground, or if you know Canadian geologists who have been to Iran, a private conversation may get more info.
And we do now that there is another form of Tellurium in Northern Iran in the form of Calaverite.
Digging needed to get to the bottom of this
P.S. if all these poor countries get wealthy, the young girls will not be tempted to go off with sugar daddies, and the few pedophiles that don't get caught, will be put out of business. It's like the way gun crime in San Jose, CA faded away by the 90s due to prosperity. I left in 1999 so I have no idea what happened after that.