Great Treasure finds from Previously Worked Ground

I had a site I wanted to work over but it been worked over by detectorists for years because it’s on the side of the road and well known pub site.

I thought I’d give it a go anyway, to my surprise I found many many deep objects, local tailors buttons, spoons etc.

I got a signal at the back of the site which I suspected would be another button by it’s sound and about 6” down I pulled out a beautiful 1852 gold half sovereign, also nearby a really good condition 1874 shilling.

I also found a lot of other interesting relics in this same area, because of the depth of all the objects in this site I decided to dig a small amount of top soil away in the high trash areas and re-detect the ground and found the cricket belt buckle.

It surprised me that all that stuff has been missed by other detectorists over the years.

Shilling Find

The Gold is Never Gone

I had been doing some research on where gold has been found on the Glendons property.2.5 gram gold nugget found by Cory from BrisbaneGold Between my talks with other prospectors and my friend who had found some rakings on the property I decided to start there. He had already been over the rakings with his Minelab GPX 5000 and at first I thought I won’t bother there. I parked at the area known as ‘The Carpark’ which is where everyone goes for panning on the property, and according to every prospector I speak to has been hammered and they don’t bother detecting there. While I was getting suited up, another member of our local prospecting club arrived and we decided to work together. He is fairly new to detecting and has a Minelab SD 2100v2. While he was getting ready I was just casually swinging the Minelab GPX-4500 about 2m from the car when I got a signal. I decided to dig, and my fellow prospector watched on eagerly as he has not found gold before. I was sure it was junk, but at about 8″ the target was out. It plopped onto the top of the pile and we both spotted the unmistakeable sparkle of gold at the same time. 1.5 grams from the carpark at ‘The Carpark’! The most brilliant light yellow piece I have seen.

Later that day we found ourselves at the rakings I had been told about. Who ever had been there had been very thorough or so they thought…. 2 minutes after beginning there I had a small signal. Again about 8″down out came a 1gram slug.

About 3m from the one gram piece and in someone’s old scraping, I heard the most minute change in the threshold. I asked my friends ‘can you hear that?’. Both said no and thought I was mad. However being a musician I can hear things most others can’t. I scraped out the old dig hole a few inches and it became a ground noise with a slight whip in the middle. Digging further down through the gravel it became evident the soil was highly mineralised and very different to the top soil. The target was still there but hard to distinguish from the ground noise. After 10″ of digging I hit a thick red clay and after one final scoop the target was out. And sure enough it was gold! A 0.7 gram piece in very difficult soil at 10″ measured!

Using a Minelab GPX-4500 with a 14” x 9″ Nugget Finder Coil. A top combo!

After that find, I sat down for a breather and let my friend put the 14” x 9” on his Minelab GPX 5000. 2 minutes later he had a beautiful 3 gram piece from an area I had already been over…..

0.7grm Nugget found at 'The Carpark' by Cory from BrisbaneGold

Hole dug whilst digging out a target

BendigoGold Customer Returns from the West with 170 gold Nuggets

Customer Gold Finds from a trip to WA

Gold Nuggets found whilst a customer was on a gold prospecting trip in WA.

A BendigoGold customer recently stopped by the store to show us the gold nuggets that he had found on a gold prospecting trip to Western Australia.

Spending 20 days in Western Australia on a solo gold prospecting trip, 170 individual gold nuggets were found weighing a total of 105 grams.

The best day resulted in 25 nuggets for 10 grams. The nuggets were found using a Minelab GPX 5000 with a 17” Elliptical Nugget Finder Coil.

What a fantastic holiday!Gold Nuggets found on a WA Prospecting Trip

Jack and Jill’s Western Australia Gold Prospecting Adventure – Part 3

Rain, rain, rain! Rain is the dominant theme in this stage of our winter prospecting in WA.
On arrival in Sandstone, we booked into the caravan park for one night, as we had to collect a parcel from the P.O. and Post Office hours in Sandstone are 8 am to 10 am, 3 days per week. Then it started to rain………………so we extended our stay in the park for another 2 nights. As is normal in the outback, all gravel roads were closed, with heavy penalties for driving and damaging them. By the third day, we could venture on some of the local tracks, but it was still too wet to set up a bush camp. After an additional night in the Park (which is very well set up, with comfortable amenities) we were offered the chance to change our booking to weekly, with very little additional cost. After 9 days, we moved on, having enjoyed the comforts of civilisation, but with very little gold.

A few days at a number of small goldfields, with little of significance to report, was followed by a great time in an area which we had never visited before. We set up our camp, then headed out to explore. Jack noticed a small shaft on the edge of the track, with quartz and ironstone scattered across the gentle slope down to a creek, and assessed that this was likely ground for nuggets. In the first hour Jill heard a very faint, deep sound, and dug feverishly until she reached bedrock. It was time to call for digging assistance! Armed with chisels and a heavy hammer, Jack chipped away at the rock for a few centimetres until a 90 gram specimen surfaced, and shone in the sunlight for the first time since creation.
A specific gravity test indicated it should contain approximately 37 grams of gold. It has spent some time in acid since that day, and the quartz is slowly being eaten away, but we still don’t have an accurate weight – hopefully, it will be very close to the predicted gold content.

90 gram specimen from bedrock

90 gram specimen found in Western Australia

gold specimen after quartz eaten away

Gold specimen found after quartz eaten away. 40 grams plus 6 grams in fragments.

Keep watching for our next blog.

This goldfield had more surprises for Jack and Jill

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