Hey everyone I had a question I can’t really figure out the answer to myself. If certain large-scale geological formations are the fossilized remains of once-living biological structures, and if gold originated from the circulatory fluids of those organisms, then modern gold deposits should preferentially occur along the remnants of ancient vascular pathways. Under this model, river valleys, ravines, fault-like channels, and other linear drainage systems may represent degraded circulatory networks where dense metallic materials accumulated and concentrated over time. Notably, many gold deposits are found in riverbeds, alluvial deposits, drainage systems, and along major geological channels where dense materials naturally accumulate. This observation is consistent with the possibility that such features could represent ancient fluid-transport pathways. Gold deposits would therefore be expected to exhibit patterns analogous to blood pooling, vascular branching, and fluid transport rather than being solely explained by conventional geological processes.
Open Question: If gold is the fossilized remnant of a once-living biological substance, then what biological structure or material did it originate from? Was it analogous to blood, plasma, lymph, a specialized transport fluid, an organ, a glandular secretion, or some other biological component? In other words, before becoming gold, what was it biologically?
