I've read for years silver reserves would be depleted by the end of this decade. Some other sources push it out a little further. Gold mining is supposed to cease around 2070. I wonder if we are in the last decade or so of film. Who is going to buy film when it's 20 bucks a roll? It's crazy Fuji slide is like $30/roll. Who buys this stuff?
We've mostly been digging deeper and in a wider area and are not, in any way close to running out of raw Earth and Oceans to mine for Gold, Silver, Rhodium, and other valuable gems, metals and rocks.
Just as raw chemicals and metals nodules populate large areas of the oceans floors, an industry waiting to be harvested, with no idea yet what all the oceans contain.
A side note:
In 78-79, Typhoon Alice hit the Eniwetok Atoll and the main island, Eniwetok itself ended up with thousands of noduals covered the island runway and the width of the island, dragged up from the ocean floor by the powerful storm.
They were generally the same size, the same shape and looked to be the same material.
What they actually were I don't know and did not inquire because the just looked like round stones to me, but I did see them and know there are valuable examples causing much debate now, with companies currently vying with each other and National Governments about underwater mining, so future "deposits" of prescious metals like Silver, may just be on the menu of possibilities from this resource. IMO
Common Sense should tell people that these supplies have yet to be detected and that the same Terra that exist above water, exist in the vast spaces our oceans occupy.
Again, IMO.