Today, the rocker box is not used as extensively as the sluice, but still is an effective method of recovering
gold in areas where there is not enough available water to operate a sluice effectively. Like a sluice box, the rocker box has
riffles and a
carpet in it to trap gold. It was designed to be used in areas with less water than a sluice box. The
mineral processing involves pouring water out of a small cup and then rocking the small sluice box like a
cradle, thus the name rocker box or cradle. Rocker boxes must be manipulated carefully, to prevent losing the gold. Although big, and difficult to move, the rocker can pick up twice the amount of the gravel, and therefore more gold in one day than an ordinary gold mining pan. The rocker, like the pan, is used extensively in small-scale
placer work, in sampling, and for washing sluice concentrates and material cleaned by hand from bedrock in other placer operations. One to three cubic yards, bank measure, can be dug and washed in a rocker per man-shift, depending upon the distance the gravel or water has to be carried, the character of the gravel, and the size of the rocker. ==Notes==