Definition

Inside Bend Scan is a field practice that helps collectors covering ground in a deliberate pattern so you do not miss small clues. In inside bend scan, the pattern is chosen to match the site so your observations stay comparable from one area to the next. It is designed for collectors, not lab work, and it helps you avoid mixing material from different spots. When done well, it improves follow-up decisions and keeps your collection’s story intact. When done poorly, it creates mislabeled finds, wasted return trips, and uncertainty about where a piece actually came from.

Collectors Context

Inside Bend Scan helps collectors avoid “tunnel vision.” With inside bend scan, you cover an area in a pattern that fits the terrain, light, and access.

Choose a pattern that supports inside bend scan. In open ground, wider passes may work; in rough talus or tight exposures, slower, narrower passes are safer and more effective. If you cannot keep the pattern consistent, shorten the area and finish it cleanly.

Use inside bend scan to compare zones, not to chase single pieces. When you see a change—more float, different color, heavier minerals—pause and document it. Patterns only become useful when you can describe where they begin and end.

Finally, tie inside bend scan to your notes and labels. Record the route you walked, the side of the exposure you favored, and what conditions affected visibility. That context prevents rework and helps you decide where to return.

Common Confusions

Inside Bend Scan vs. wandering Wandering follows whatever catches your eye and leaves gaps you never checked. Inside Bend Scan uses inside bend scan to cover an area deliberately so comparisons are meaningful.

Inside Bend Scan vs. rushing the pattern Moving too fast makes you miss small clues, especially in mixed gravel and float. inside bend scan should be paced so you can actually observe the surface.

Inside Bend Scan vs. ignoring light and glare Visibility changes with sun angle, shade, and wet surfaces. Adjust inside bend scan to conditions and record what affected what you could see.

Inside Bend Scan vs. chasing single finds One keeper can pull you off-pattern and erase the value of your coverage. Use inside bend scan to map zones first, then follow up deliberately.

Further Reading